Seeds of Surveillance: The Track and Trace Playbook
Colin Todhunter
QR codes are usually associated with convenience. In the Seed Act 2026, they become something else entirely: extending traceability to what is grown before it enters the supply chain, changing who has control over our food.
The Seed Act 2026 is presented by the Union Government of India as a necessary modernisation measure to curb the circulation of fake or substandard seeds.
The stated aim is the rollout of a new nationwide traceability system that mandates QR codes on all seed packets, compulsory registration for all commercial seed entities and significantly heightened penalties—up to ₹30 lakh (€27,000+ euros) and three years’ imprisonment—for seed fraud.
The government has consistently maintained that the Seed Act 2026 is designed to regulate only the commercial seed trade and will not interfere with the long-standing rights of farmers to save, sow, exchange or share seeds within their communities.
Officials emphasise that these traditional, non-branded and community-based practices remain a vital part of India’s agricultural heritage and are explicitly exempt from the registration and digital traceability requirements imposed on commercial entities.
While the government maintains that the Act will rebuild farmer trust, streamline quality control and strictly protect the traditional rights of farmers to save, share and exchange seeds, critics like the Samyukt Kisan Morcha (an umbrella coalition of 400+ farmers’ unions) view these reforms as a well-worn corporate strategy of enclosure that eradicates seed and food sovereignty.
Critics argue that these government assurances are insufficient and potentially misleading. They contend that by failing to explicitly define and protect community seed systems as a distinct sector, the Act leaves them vulnerable to administrative overreach.
Farmer organisations worry that without clear, ironclad legal safeguards, the pressure to comply with registration and branding requirements—especially for small-scale seed producers who may use simple packaging—will effectively force them to adopt the same burdensome and costly standards as large corporations, gradually pushing decentralised, village-level systems towards extinction.
Even with an informal exemption, the pressure to meet the ‘certified’ market standard could make traditional seed sharing increasingly risky. Critics argue that the rigid requirements for ‘certified, stable and uniform’ seeds will effectively criminalise or marginalise indigenous, locally adapted varieties, creating a dependency loop that forces farmers to rely on high-cost, proprietary inputs from large agribusinesses.
This would, in effect, mirror the pattern of corporate capture and loss of food sovereignty observed in other countries across the world.
From Latin America to Africa
As documented in the 2018 film Seeds: Common or Corporate Property?, which looked at the situation in Latin America, this pattern relies on a predictable sequence of events designed to dismantle the autonomy of peasant farmers.
In Latin America, a number of treaties and agreement over breeders’ rights and intellectual property were enacted to prevent peasant farmers from freely improving, sharing or replanting their traditional seeds. Thousands of seed varieties have since been lost and corporate seeds have increasingly dominated agriculture.
To move farmers away from using native seeds and to get them to plant corporate seeds, seed ‘certification’ rules and laws were brought into being by national governments on behalf of commercial seed giants like Monsanto.
In Costa Rica, the battle to overturn restrictions on seeds was lost with the signing of a free trade agreement with the US, although this flouted the country’s seed biodiversity laws. Seed laws in Brazil created a corporate property regime for seeds which effectively marginalised all indigenous seeds that were locally adapted over generations. This regime tried to stop farmers from using or breeding their own seeds.
It was an attempt to privatise seed. The privatisation of something that is a common heritage. For ten millennia, seeds were treated as a shared, inter-generational heritage, but the 20th century saw the rise of a corporate model that hybridised, patented and modified these seeds to demand monoculture farming and constant chemical inputs.
In Seeds: Common or Corporate Property?, an interviewee claims that if corporate seeds end up in a peasants’ field, the corporation can take the entire crop. It is a way of getting rid of the small farmer as agribusiness corporations strive to take control of the entire global food chain.
This pattern of enclosure is not unique to Latin America; similar struggles have unfolded across Africa, where diverse seed systems have also faced intense pressure from corporate-aligned legislation. In many African nations, regional seed harmonisation protocols (often pushed by international trade agreements) have sought to impose strict commercial standards on farmers.
These regulations frequently mirror the Latin American experiences, aiming to replace indigenous, climate-resilient varieties with a narrow range of patented, uniform seeds. Across the continent, movements like the Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa have consistently challenged these laws, warning that they facilitate the dispossession of smallholder farmers and undermine the localised seed diversity that is essential for food security.
Corporate control over seeds is also an attack on the survival of communities and their traditions. Seeds are integral to identity because in rural communities people are acutely aware that they are ‘all children of the seed’. Their lives have been tied to planting, harvesting, seeds, soil and the seasons for thousands of years.
By highlighting the fight back against the ‘Monsanto law’ (GM corn) in Guatemala, the film shows how movements are resisting regulations and seed certification laws. As part of the resistance, farmers organised seed exchanges, seed fairs, public markets and seed banks. They sought to ensure that seeds for different altitudes, different soils and different nutritional needs remained available.
In Brazil, the film describes how previous governments supported peasant agriculture and agroecology by developing supply chains with public sector schools and hospitals (Food Acquisition Programme). This secured good prices and brought farmers together. It came about by social movements applying pressure on the government to act.
The federal government also brought native seeds and distributed them to farmers across the country, which was important for combatting the advance of the corporations as many farmers had lost access to native seeds.
However, no matter how well organised small farmers become, they might not be able to win the battle on their own. The struggle has to be taken to cities to raise awareness among consumers about how food is being appropriated by transnational corporations without their consent or knowledge. Without involving consumers, they become an ignorant link which merely serves to perpetuate the chain of corporate control.
Struggle for the seed
This well-tested playbook now appears to be taking hold in India. The Seed Act 2026 introduces a mandatory, digital traceability system that serves as a modern tool for the same exclusion.
The strategy is to impose rigid, scientific standards that indigenous, locally-adapted seeds—which are naturally diverse and unstable—cannot meet, thereby making them effectively illegal or commercially impossible to maintain. By framing this as a necessary move for consumer protection or quality control, states frequently obscure the fact that they are creating a corporate property regime, a cynical tactic that has successfully eroded food sovereignty in Latin America for decades.
The historical evidence suggests that this strategy is designed to create a dependency loop that eventually forces the smallholder out of the market entirely. Once corporate seeds dominate a region, the resulting food chain becomes brittle, with the Food and Agriculture Organization already noting that the global diet has shrunk to rely on a dangerously narrow range of cultivated species.
In the Indian context, the transition to certified seeds is viewed by activists as an attack on the very identity and survival of rural communities. Once these corporate regimes take root, they are used to exert control over the entire food chain, often leaving farmers as mere tenants who must pay royalties for the privilege of working their own land.
The resistance in India is a direct reaction to this well-worn trajectory. The fight for the seed is a fight against the total colonisation of food systems. For those who value autonomy, privacy and the right to exist outside the grip of transnational monopolies, the Indian struggle is a critical front in the global resistance against the corporate enclosure of the planet.
The struggle over India’s Seed Act is not an isolated dispute. It forms part of a much longer history of corporate enclosure, seed monopolisation and farmer resistance. These developments are explored in greater detail in the open-access book India’s Farmers Against the Global Agri-Cartel: Chronicling Resistance to Corporate Enclosures.
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Will this system of seed registration also have a category for GMO seeds?
Didn’t think so.
QR codes – the bane of/on natural life. I’ve seen a few in remote locations in place of information noticeboards – all well and good if you want to divert your attention into your phone, rather than ‘experiencing’ nature.
It was so hot I had to open the window in the middle of summer—one of the most extreme survival decisions I’ve made since it rained last week.
Yeah, nobody know about the seed scam the Big Ag companies pull There is nobody who wouldn’t be scandolize by it, nobody. But they will never know.
YES!!! THEY ARE SPYING ON US!… next
These post 911 “public safety”, “security” and “mandated” behaviors, are forced consumption measures. Universal unregulated capitalism was “the end of history” for the elites, but in a fully occupied, no-growth planet, it is the end of human society. Thatcher stated there is no such thing as society. This has been the agenda since. Where there is no growth possible, no thing or place to exploit with empty space to dump the ashes, the only likely target for exploitative profit is mining the already exploited humanity, and what’s left of Earth. This requires force to execute. Thus the State is directed to assume the roll of drum-beating overlord, forcing society to comply to corporate/elite desires for controlled monoculture. The public has no say in these FAKE democratic republics. It is up to the public to realize we have right of consent. We must establish implementation and enforcement of public consent decision making. We must step up and self-govern ourselves without an elite, a PTB or any other type of authority not delegated and overseen by us.
allow me
What is the overall goal besides the obvious one – control, could it be reducing the amount of seed produced – and replace it with corporate GMO seeds, which can be infused with just about anything – is it to reduce the amount of farmers as well, and free land which can be bought by whomever at a dirt cheap price.
We must ask ourselves why governments and corporations want to basically destroy the natural hands that feed us, I cannot understand why millions of people around the globe are not up in arms about stuff like this, in the West the sustained assault on the cow, a mainstay of humans for thousands of years (in one form or another) is reaching epic proportions, the farmers in France have even resorted to hiding their cows, to stop the authorities injecting them with god only knows what.
The utter nonsense propagated by the PTB is that – cows fart too much and they are heating up the atmosphere – and cows are causing global warming.
One must say – that with regards to seeds, governments must be in bed with the corporations which want to control who can use them, and when, and at what cost, basically governments are undermining and removing nations food security, by placing it into the hands of the private sector – and they surely are well recompensed for selling out our food security/sovereignty.
Control and the reduction of farms – must be achieved by the PTB, for their synthetic food products to become a success – not enough folk know this, or care to do something about it – so the corporations unnatural farm food replacements – will creep onto the supermarkets shelves at a slow but steady pace.
In India though it me be a bit more difficult to remove the cow – as its seen as a sacred creature, everywhere else the cow is fair game – as are we, the masses.
Problem – Reaction – Solution
In a prime agri area of coded & regulated seed crop, a disease or blight takes hold and decimates the crop. The “cause” of this “blight” is “determined by The Science” to be a tainted shared and unregulated seed carrying some sort of parasite.
That indigenous farmer (and possibly his village) have their crops/fields burned & destroyed, he is prosecuted and his land confiscated.
It is subsequently placed in the hands of a large conglomerate.
Let’s hope I’m wrong
Inseedious.
But that’s how the Corparasites expand their ugly, monolithic empires isn’t it?