Finnish plant breeding has long traditions. For more than a hundred years, the importance of varieties adapted to our conditions and domestic breeding activities has been recognised for agriculture and food production — supported today by Boreal’s Nordic expertise in breeding for northern conditions. Since 1994, plant breeding has been carried out in Finland under the name Boreal.
1904: Finnish Seed Association is founded; plant breeding is included from the start.
Plant breeding becomes organised, trial farms are established and breeding material is collected. A national awakening is experienced: food security and livestock production must be ensured.
Plant breeding and agriculture carry great responsibility for the food supply of the newly independent nation.
Wars disrupt breeding work, but after the war, efforts focus especially on bread grains and peas.
After national crises, plant breeding gains new importance — its broad societal value is recognised.
New research and varieties emerge in abundance. Finnish plant breeding finds its identity, and Finnish varieties dominate the fields.
Agriculture and varieties develop rapidly. New varieties enable quick adoption of combine harvesting. A gene bank is established in Jokioinen at the end of the decade.
The Plant Breeding Promotion Act (1977) and international agreements strengthen breeders’ rights.
Biotechnological methods enter breeding, with doubled haploids from tissue culture first introduced in barley.
The merging of MTT’s and Hankkija’s breeding operations brings together the materials, expertise and resources of Finnish plant breeding.
The name Boreal comes from Latin, meaning “northern.”
Boreal is incorporated in 2000. The introduction of the TOS fee broadens the funding base and enables further development.
Demand for Boreal varieties grows in neighbouring export markets. Breeding techniques evolve rapidly — especially biotechnological and DNA‑based tools.
International cooperation increases as Boreal deepens collaboration with Limagrain, Europe’s largest plant breeder (2011).
Genomic selection tools adopted 2014, beginning with six‑row barley.