… or any other living beings?
As a recent cat mom to two delightful felines (see above), I've naturally found myself pondering the best ways to ensure their protection and well-being. While patenting my cats isn't really a viable option (*spoiler alert*), this raises an intriguing question: what types of living beings can, and perhaps more crucially, cannot be patented?
Patentability Requirements in Europe
In Europe, for something to be patentable, it must be both new and inventive compared to everything that already exists or is known. Additionally, the patent application must describe the invention comprehensively and clearly enough for an expert to understand and reproduce it.
Plants and animals
Under Article 53(b) of the European Patent Convention (EPC), there are specific restrictions on the patentability of plants and animals. This article has a two-part exclusion:
The term exclusively, as used above, is to mean that a plant or animal originating from a technical process or characterized by a technical intervention in the genome is not covered by the exclusion from patentability even if in addition a non-technical method (crossing and selection) is applied in its production.
Transgenic plants or animals, and technically induced mutants, can be patented (if they are not confined to a specific animal or plant variety), while the products of conventional breeding cannot. It’s important to note that, for obvious reasons, animal varieties and any processes for modifying the genetic identity of animals which cause them suffering without substantial medical benefit are not patentable.
Microorganisms
Microorganisms are patentable in Europe, even if they haven’t been genetically modified. However, if the microorganism existed before, novelty would require it to be isolated from its natural environment.
The term “microorganisms” includes bacteria, plasmids, viruses, fungi, algae, and protozoa. Additionally, microbiological processes and their products are patentable if they meet the standard criteria of novelty and inventiveness.
Reproducibility of Living Matter
For living matter to be patentable, it must be possible to reproduce it in a way that has exactly the same technical features. This can be assured by:
Humans and human embryos
Under Rule 28 EPC, European patents cannot be granted for biotechnological inventions related to:
Rule 29 EPC further specifies that the human body, at any stage of its formation or development, along with the mere discovery of one of its elements (including the sequence or partial sequence of a gene), cannot be patented. However, elements isolated from the human body or produced by a technical process — such as a gene sequence — can be patented, even if their structure is identical to natural elements.
Likewise, while the use of human embryos for industrial or commercial purposes is excluded from patentability, inventions aimed at therapeutic or diagnostic purposes that benefit the embryo itself are not. However, human embryonic stem cells are unpatentable if their derivation requires the destruction of an embryo.
So, Can I Patent My Cats?
Unfortunately, unless I’ve modified the genetics of my two feline beauties — which, of course, I wouldn’t, as they’re already perfect — patenting them is off the table.
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