Renewed five-year contracts for the organisation of statutory trials as part of the National List system for approving new crop varieties, have been signed with the British Society of Plant Breeders (BSPB), Defra and the Scottish Government. 

BSPB has organised ‘Value for cultivation and use (VCU)’ testing and trials under official supervision for all crop species except potatoes since 2005. 

Its chief executive, Dr Penny Maplestone, said she welcomed the continuation of existing arrangements as the best way to provide cost-effective variety testing services for government and the industry alike. 

“Over the past 12 years, BSPB organisation of VCU trials has delivered savings to plant breeders and the wider industry by minimising the costs of variety registration and evaluation, while at the same time operating a dual-purpose system producing trials data for both National List and Recommended List systems,” argued Dr Maplestone.

“Before this system was agreed between the national authorities and industry stakeholders, the costs of statutory variety evaluation were spiralling out of control, and separate trials programmes were carried out to generate information for NL and RL purposes.”

She added: “Renewal of the BSPB contract by Defra and the Scottish Government provides us with confirmation that this remains the most efficient and flexible system of variety evaluation, reducing costs and duplication for the industry while also delivering an assurance of high quality and technically relevant trials data,” said Dr Maplestone.