Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

WSU And Biotech Firm In Legal Fight Over Cosmic Crisp Apple Variety

Listen

https://www.nwpb.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/WEB-WSU-Apples-AK-031418.mp3

Something has gone sour between Washington State University and a Seattle-based biotech company. It's over a new, highly-prized apple variety that has not yet hit the market.

After 20 years of study, WSU researchers developed a new apple called the Cosmic Crisp. It’s a blend of a Honeycrisp and a red variety called Enterprise. It has farmers excited because it lasts a long time in storage and is juicy and tasty.

WSU worked with a Seattle-based company, Phytelligence, to grow some of those trees. Then, according to Washington State University’s spokesman Phil Weiler, the company allegedly sold the young starts without permission.

“Frankly, we don’t know where that plant material is,” he said. “One of the things that we are asking for in our countersuits is to be able to make sure either that plant material is turned over back to the University or it’s destroyed.”

But Phytelligence had sued the university first, claiming that WSU blocked it from licensing the new variety.

“Never in my wildest dreams would I have thought it would have taken this long to get a pretty run of the mill, standard license," Hunt said. And we’ve licensed plenty of other things from the university. It’s just surprising that the time ran out.”

Hunt said he had to cancel multiple large orders from farmers.

"Our efforts have been met with repeated delays and misinformation, ultimately preventing us from propagating Cosmic Crisp to date. During this time, Washington state growers have become increasingly frustrated with unnecessarily restricted access to Cosmic Crisp," according to a statement on Phytelligence's website.

WSU says the biotech company broke its contract and infringed on the university’s patent and has a lot of plant material that either needs to be returned to WSU or destroyed. The university claims these unlicensed trees threaten the careful quality control of its newly-branded variety and steals from farmers who invested in its development.

The parties have filed three lawsuits in state and federal court. In the state case, a trial is set for February 2019.

NOTE: Northwest Public Broadcasting is editorially independent of its FCC license holder, Washington State University.

Related Stories:

Want To Grow An Apple Tree? Don’t Start With Apple Seeds

The end result of careful selection and pollination: an edible apple, in this photo a crimson gala. Photo credit: John Clements Facebook Google+ Twitter Email… Continue Reading Want To Grow An Apple Tree? Don’t Start With Apple Seeds Read More » Max Bartlett May 3, 2017

The Future Of Apple Breeding May Be Hidden In Ancient Species

Malus sieversii, the ancient apple, seen here in Kyrgysztan. Sieversii comes in many sizes and colors, but are generally inedible. Photo credit: Creative Commons… Continue Reading The Future Of Apple Breeding May Be Hidden In Ancient Species Read More » Max Bartlett November 10, 2016

Antique Apples, Believed Extinct, Found In Washington

The Northwest is home to many of the world’s most popular apples. But it also has apples many believed no longer exist. On eastern Washington’s… Continue Reading Antique Apples, Believed Extinct, Found In Washington Read More » Max Bartlett November 10, 2016