02 June 2022
In 2018 the Constitutional Court of South Africa ruled that personal and medical marijuana use in South Africa was deemed to be legal, with the Court directing the South African government to put in place the necessary legal framework to give effect to the Court’s decision within 24 months of the judgement. Unfortunately, the government has been slow to implement the necessary legal framework, which was naturally placed on the back burner whilst managing the recent worldwide coronavirus pandemic. As we slowly return to normal life the topic has been placed back on the table for discussion and action. Currently, however, South Africa is in legal limbo as far as commercial cannabis exploitation for the personal use of cannabis is concerned despite companies already having invested heavily in the eventual implementation of the legal framework.
Interestingly, companies like Holy Basil (https://holybasil.co.za) have begun implementing collective growing strategies which they believe are compliant with the Constitutional Court ruling as they are within the legal quota but still allow for the distribution of cannabis products to members (consumers) for personal use. Recently, other companies with a similar strategy have come under fire from local authorities which has also spurred several cases seeking to clarify whether the Constitutional Court judgement would allow companies to grow cannabis on behalf of individuals for their personal use.
In September 2020 parliament published the Cannabis for Private Purposes Bill, which has subsequently been updated and is currently receiving submissions in relation thereto. In addition, the President of South Africa mentioned the “huge potential for investment and job creation” offered by the cannabis industry in his state of the nation address in 2022. These smoke signals appear to indicate that the four-twentieth hour has arrived, and that the government is poised to take advantage of the tax revenue windfall that comes with an emerging industry brought in from the foggy wasteland of the illicit marketplace.
The potential tax revenue numbers are not insignificant. Recently, the state of Massachusetts in the United States indicated that the tax revenue obtained from cannabis exceeded tax revenue from alcohol, joining other US states where cannabis has been legalized, with California seemingly topping that list with over US $1 billion dollars in cannabis tax revenue in 2020.
Notwithstanding the above, tax revenue should not be the sole basis for legalising cannabis as it will prove more difficult for a nascent legal industry to compete with an already thriving illegal industry where prices will naturally be lower without taxes. With this in mind, it will be important for those in the legal industry to unlock value elsewhere and arguably this can be obtained from leveraging intellectual property protection to establish South Africa as a dominant player in the market.
In terms of South African patent law, plants obtained through a micro-biological process, for example, transgenic manipulation of a plant genome, can be protected. Plants produced using biological means, for example, crossbreeding, are, however, specifically excluded from patent protection.
Plants generated from traditional biological means can still be protected using a lesser-known branch of intellectual property law rights, aptly referred to as plant breeders’ rights, which provide for certain monopoly rights to the breeders of new plant varieties. In terms of the Plant Breeders’ Rights Act No 15 of 1976 protection may be obtained in South Africa in respect of a new, distinct, uniform and stable variety of any kind of plant that is prescribed. In order to be registerable, a plant must thus be prescribed, i.e. named in the list of “kinds of plant” which is set out in Table 1 of the Regulations under the Act. This list is varied from time to time. Examples of kinds of plants that are currently registerable are:
- Agricultural crops, such as rooibos tea or tobacco.
- Vegetable crops, such as spanspek (sweet melon).
- Fruit crops, such as granadilla (passion fruit).
- Ornamental crops, such as proteas.
- Trees, such as milkwood.
- Grasses, such as blue buffalo grass.



