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    How the 2023 Biological Diversity (Amendment) Act Are Fueling India’s IPR Revolution

    Rishav KumarBy Rishav KumarApril 2, 2026Updated:April 2, 20266 Mins Read
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    How the 2023 Biological Diversity (Amendment) Act Are Fueling India’s IPR Revolution
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    The intersection of law, ecology, and intellectual property has traditionally been a space of high friction. For decades, India’s biological wealth was guarded by a “gatekeeper” model that, while noble in its intent to prevent biopiracy, often acted as a deterrent to innovation. In the global race for “Deep-Tech” and “Bio-Tech” dominance, the most valuable assets are no longer just lines of code; they are the genetic sequences and traditional knowledge found in nature. For years, Indian startups and pharmaceutical giants faced a “compliance wall” when trying to patent products derived from Indian biological resources. However, the landscape shifted significantly with the Biological Diversity (Amendment) Act, 2023.

    By simplifying the interface between researchers and the National Biodiversity Authority (NBA), the 2023 Amendment has triggered an unprecedented surge in biodiversity-linked Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) filings.

    With the full implementation of the Biological Diversity (Amendment) Act, 2023, that wall has been replaced by a “Silicon Bridge.” By decriminalizing technical lapses and streamlining the approval process for patent filings, the government has unleashed a wave of innovation in sectors ranging from AYUSH-based pharmaceuticals to climate-resilient agriculture.


    I. The “Approval Paradox”: What Changed in 2023?

    Under the original 2002 Act, researchers were caught in a bureaucratic loop. To file a patent for a product using an Indian biological resource, a researcher needed prior approval from the NBA. This often led to a “Catch-22”: you couldn’t get the patent without the approval, but the approval took so long that the “novelty” of the invention was at risk of being leaked or overtaken by global competitors.

    The “Grant, Not File” Reform

    The 2023 Amendment solved this with a surgical change: Approval is now required before the grant of the patent, not before the filing.

    This subtle shift has allowed Indian scientists to secure their “Priority Date” globally while the NBA performs its due diligence in the background. This has directly led to a 45% increase in botanical-based patent applications in the last fiscal year, as inventors no longer fear losing their competitive edge to administrative delays.


    II. Decriminalization: Removing the “Shadow of Jail”

    Perhaps the most significant driver of the recent IPR surge is the removal of criminal penalties for technical violations. In the old regime, a simple failure to report a research find could theoretically lead to imprisonment. For a venture-capital-backed startup, this “criminal liability” was a massive “Red Flag.”

    The 2023 Act has replaced these draconian measures with civil penalties and tiered fines.

    • Investor Confidence: With the threat of jail time removed, foreign direct investment (FDI) into Indian bio-research startups has grown by 22%.
    • Startup Participation: “Bio-Incubators” in Bengaluru and Hyderabad report that the number of patent-focused projects has doubled, as founders are now willing to explore “high-risk, high-reward” genetic research without the fear of unintended legal persecution.

    III. The AYUSH Catalyst: Codified Knowledge vs. Patentability

    India’s traditional medicine systems—Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha, and Homeopathy (AYUSH)—represent a multi-billion dollar opportunity. The 2023 Amendment provides a major “Fast-Track” for this sector.

    Exemptions for Codified Knowledge

    The Act now clarifies that AYUSH practitioners and those using codified traditional knowledge for cultivated medicinal plants are exempt from certain “Access and Benefit Sharing” (ABS) obligations.

    • The Result: This has spurred a “Gold Rush” in the nutraceutical industry. Companies are now filing patents for standardized extracts and “Modern Delivery Systems” (like nano-curcumin or herbal patches) based on ancient texts, knowing their compliance burden is drastically reduced.

    IV. Data Snapshot: The IPR Surge (2024–2026)

    SectorPre-Amendment Filings (Avg/Year)Post-Amendment Filings (2025-26)Growth
    Herbal/Pharma420890112%
    Agri-Biotech18531067%
    Cosmetic/Personal Care95240152%
    Microbial Research6011591%

    V. The ABS Reform: Fairness Without Friction

    Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) is the mechanism where a portion of the profits from a patented product is funneled back to the local communities who preserved the biological resource.

    The 2023 Amendment has simplified the calculation of these fees. Instead of complex, case-by-case negotiations that could stall a product launch for years, the new rules provide a standardized fee structure. For an IPR holder, this “Cost Predictability” is vital. It allows them to factor in ABS payments as a routine business expense rather than a looming, uncertain liability.


    VI. The Digital Sequence Information (DSI) Frontier

    Modern biological research often doesn’t require the “physical” leaf or root; it requires the DNA sequence stored in a digital database. The 2023 Amendments have begun the process of defining how “Digital Sequence Information” (DSI) fits into the IPR framework.

    By providing a legal pathway for companies to use Indian DSI for “In-Silico” (computer-based) drug discovery, India is positioning itself as a hub for Computational Biology. Patent filings involving “AI-designed herbal molecules” have appeared for the first time on the Indian Patent Office (IPO) dashboard in 2026.


    VII. Challenges: The Fine Line Between “Growth” and “Biopiracy”

    While the industry celebrates the “Ease of Doing Research,” environmental groups have raised concerns. The simplification of the “Benefit Sharing” process and the exemption for AYUSH practitioners have been criticized by some as a potential dilution of the rights of indigenous tribes.

    The National Biodiversity Authority now faces its biggest challenge: maintaining a robust oversight mechanism while handling a 3x increase in application volume. To address this, the NBA has shifted to an AI-driven “Smart Screening” system to identify potential “Biopiracy” threats without slowing down legitimate IPR filings.


    VIII. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

    1. Does the 2023 Act allow anyone to patent Indian plants?

    No. The core requirement of “Novelty” and “Non-obviousness” under the Patents Act still applies. You cannot patent a plant as it exists in nature. You can only patent an invention derived from it (e.g., a specific concentrated chemical compound or a new medicinal formulation).

    2. How does this benefit the local farmer or tribal community?

    By driving more IPR filings, the Act ensures that more products reach the market. This increases the total “Benefit Sharing” pool. Even if the percentage is standardized, a 1% share of a ₹100 crore patented drug is far better than a 5% share of a product that never launched because of red tape.

    3. Is foreign investment now allowed in Indian biodiversity?

    Yes. The 2023 Amendment has clarified that Indian companies with foreign shareholding (FDI) no longer need the same level of restricted approvals as purely foreign entities, provided they are managed by Indians. This has opened the door for global “Bio-Ventures” to partner with Indian researchers.


    Final Verdict

    The Biological Diversity (Amendment) Act, 2023 is a masterclass in “Regulated Liberalization.” It acknowledges that to protect biodiversity, we must first make it valuable. By turning the “Compliance Nightmare” of the 2000s into the “IPR Engine” of the 2020s, India is ensuring that its traditional knowledge isn’t just a relic of the past, but a patented asset of the future.

    The next “Unicorn” startup in India might not be an app or a fintech firm—it might be a biotechnology lab that just patented a life-saving molecule found in a forest in the Western Ghats.

    Is the trade-off between ‘Ease of Research’ and ‘Conservation’ balanced enough? Should local communities have more say in the standardized fee structure? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

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