summary
Introduced
02/19/2026
02/19/2026
In Committee
02/19/2026
02/19/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
2026 Regular Session
Bill Summary
The bill establishes ownership rights of agricultural data and requirements for transactions involving agricultural data. There are 2 types of agricultural data: Raw agricultural data and transformed agricultural data. Raw agricultural data is defined as unprocessed information and data generated from agricultural production operations, agricultural equipment operations, or agricultural land that consists of factual observations and measurements and that has not been converted to transformed agricultural data. Transformed agricultural data is defined as raw agricultural data that has been analyzed or otherwise transformed through the application of algorithms or analytical methods to produce information that could be considered intellectual property. The bill establishes that an agricultural producer (producer) that generates raw agricultural data from the producer's agricultural operations retains ownership of the raw agricultural data and is entitled to sell that data to a data service provider and receive fair compensation for that raw agricultural data. The bill also establishes that a producer that provides raw agricultural data to a data service provider that then converts the raw agricultural data to transformed agricultural data still retains ownership of the transformed agricultural data and may copyright, distribute, license, or sell the transformed agricultural data. A producer may also enter into agreements with multiple data service providers regarding the use of the producer's raw agricultural data and transformed agricultural data. The bill establishes limits on what a data service provider may do with a producer's transformed agricultural data. A data service provider must not: ! Prevent a producer from monetizing the producer's transformed agricultural data; ! Limit or restrict the markets for transformed agricultural data that a producer may participate in; ! Impose contractual provisions that grant the data service provider exclusive rights to the producer's data without fair market value compensation; or ! Discriminate or retaliate against a producer based on the producer's decisions regarding the monetization of the producer's data. The bill establishes an excise tax on transactions involving transformed agricultural data that occur within the state or transactions involving transformed agricultural data generated by producers in the state. On and after July 1, 2027, an excise tax of 3% of the net taxable sales from a data transaction will be collected on data transactions, unless the transaction meets certain exceptions. The money collected from the excise tax will be deposited into the Colorado agricultural future loan program cash fund, which supports young producers in Colorado. The bill contains certain provisions related to how the department of agriculture will collect, implement, and enforce the excise tax. The excise tax will be referred to voters for approval at the statewide election held in November 2026. The bill authorizes the attorney general or a district attorney to enforce the provisions of the bill as an unfair and deceptive trade practice under the "Colorado Consumer Protection Act".
AI Summary
This bill, titled the "Agricultural Data Ownership and Market Competition Act," establishes clear ownership rights for agricultural producers over their data, distinguishing between "raw agricultural data" (unprocessed information from farming operations) and "transformed agricultural data" (raw data analyzed or processed into intellectual property). Producers will retain ownership of raw data and are entitled to fair compensation if it's used to create transformed data. Crucially, producers will also own the transformed data, allowing them to copyright, license, and sell it, and they can enter agreements with multiple data service providers. The bill also places limits on what data service providers can do with a producer's transformed data, preventing them from blocking monetization, restricting markets, claiming exclusive rights without fair compensation, or retaliating against producers. Furthermore, starting July 1, 2027, a 3% excise tax will be levied on transactions involving transformed agricultural data within the state or generated by in-state producers, with the revenue going to the Colorado Agricultural Future Loan Program cash fund to support young farmers; this tax will require voter approval in November 2026. Violations of the bill's provisions will be considered unfair and deceptive trade practices, enforceable by the Attorney General or district attorneys.
Committee Categories
Agriculture and Natural Resources
Sponsors (2)
Last Action
House Agriculture, Water & Natural Resources Hearing (13:30:00 3/16/2026 Room 0107) (on 03/16/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://leg.colorado.gov/bills/HB26-1270 |
| BillText | https://leg.colorado.gov/bill_files/112350/download |
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