Skip to main content

The protection of biological resources, their access and regulation and the application of benefit sharing principles are still in the nascent stage in India, according to Neeti Wilson, with recognition of bioresources as IP slow but sure.

The different forms of IP protection available in India presently include patents, trade-marks, copyrights, designs, geographical indications, integrated circuit layout designs and plant variety protection. More recently, biodiversity and biopiracy concerns have flagged the requirement of protection for biological resources.

The developing countries of the world – being the richest in biodiversity – have the biggest challenge protecting their biological heritage and the IP derived from the same. The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) led the way to the legislation for protection and regulation of biological diversity. This article highlights the three main pieces of legislation in India impacting the area of bioresources: patent law, plant protection law and the biodiversity law.

This article was published in Asia IP October 2009.

To continue reading, please contact us at email@anandandanand.com

Most Recent

News & Insights

VIEW ALL
Thought Leadership
Feb 13, 2026

‘First published on Enterprise IT World’ By: Subroto Kumar Panda How the 2026 IT Rule Amendments Protect You in the Age of AI In an era where seeing

The Digital Armor – 2026
Thought Leadership
Feb 11, 2026

Authors: Safir Anand, Mudit Kaushik and Sehr Anand The establishment of a new National Institute of Design (NID-East) in India’s eastern region,

Can New NID-East Ignite India’s Design Revolution?
News & Updates, Thought Leadership
Feb 10, 2026

‘First published on India Business Law Journal’ By: Dr. Ajai Garg and Subroto Kumar Panda Business has always been about risk, the balance between

Agentic AI: Productivity Gains, Risks and Data Demands Today
News & Updates, Thought Leadership
Jan 30, 2026

First published by Lexology. Authors: Safir Anand and Omesh Puri In today’s innovation‑driven economy, design rights have become a core element of

Proposed Reforms to India’s Design Protection Framework