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    Are Patent Exceptions Necessary For Climate Change Technology? Defining WIPO’s Role

    Published on 26 March 2009 @ 11:12 am

    By , Intellectual Property Watch

    Addressing the challenge of climate change will require technological solutions and the dissemination of those solutions to as many users as possible. A panel at the World Intellectual Property Organization Tuesday asked how intellectual property law might help or hinder that transfer, and what role the organisation might play in creating the right policy.

    “If WIPO isn’t part of the solution, then what the hell is it for? It’s obviously the biggest challenge of our generation,” said an audience member who identified himself as from the mission of the United Kingdom speaking on his own behalf.

    “The World Trade Organization members have not been moving fast enough on this issue. Discussions on technology transfer for clean technology have run aground due to issues with the wider package [in the Doha Round of trade talks],” added the official. “There’s an opportunity here for WIPO.”

    Where exactly patent barriers to technology transfer can be found – if they exist – is not an easy question, said Ilian Iliev, CEO of CambridgeIP, which is in the process of developing a patent database with the Chatham House, a research and analysis organisation that also promotes debates on major issues of the day.

    Chatham House, along with the International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD), hosted the event on 24 March, alongside the 23-27 March WIPO Standing Committee on the Law of Patents.

    “WIPO should be brought into discussion on areas of public policy, [and] should not be away from its stance as a UN agency,” panellist Cristiano Berbert of the Brazilian mission told the event. “The IP system should be more responsive to UN goals – and preservation of the environment and reversal of climate change are major UN goals.”

    The World Trade Organization Doha Declaration on Public Health, which lays out IP guidelines specific to health goals, “demonstrates that IP and patent law will have to be involved in a more specialised way,” Berbert added.

    “The way that technology evolves will lead us in the future to have specific sectors of IP law” tailored to certain kinds of technology, he said. The WTO Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights agreement does not allow for differentiation between fields of technology, but in so far as certain areas bear a higher degree of public interest than others, “we should be prepared to ask ourselves hard questions.”

    “Do we need to be prepared to implement exceptions in these areas?” is one such question, Berbert added. As “it is not merely a challenge of consolidating a market in green technology, but a question of how to reverse climate change.”

    But there is also the question of how to create appropriate incentives for the innovators of needed technology, argued Thaddeus Burns of General Electric, a multinational firm with a large research and development investment in green technology.

    “There is no technology transfer without technology development,” he explained, and “big advances in technology requires big R&D investment.”

    The private sector, said Burns, is responsible for 70 percent of research and development globally on these issues – spending between US$40 to $60 billion annually, as opposed to US$10 billion spent by the public sector. The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change has said that an additional $200 billion will be needed annually by 2030 to reduce emissions – that spending must be incentivised, he added.

    How incentives work depend on who you want to motivate. Governments are best suited for long range research and development, and academia may be more motivated by prizes – but the private sector wants patents, said Burns.

    “From our perspective at GE, IP is a necessary enabling force that allows us to justify these R&D investments,” he said, adding that successful technology transfer paradigms can be made involving licensing of technology and associated IP rights, joint development and joint commercialisation efforts, or outsourcing of the manufacture of components to end products.

    Iliev said that the research done by Chatham House and CambridgeIP [Note: corrected to include Chatham House] showed growth in recent years in the number of alliances over patents on green technology, though these collaborations were mainly within richer Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. Cooperation between OECD and non-OECD nations was lacking.

    Of the recent trends in patents on green technology, Iliev said, the growth in importance of China is notable. Patent offices the US, Japan, and WIPO remain important, but China’s growth is significant as it is a development of the last 5 to 7 years.

    Most recent green technology patents are related to wind energy, he added, as opposed to the five other areas examined by the research (concentrated solar thermal energy, biomass to electricity, clean coal, solar photovoltaics, and carbon capture and storage). Within wind energy patents, most are on three core spaces – generators, drive train, and the blades/wings – he said, though there is increasing activity in software and control systems for the windmills. GE, Burns told Intellectual Property Watch, is working on the implementation such a grid in the United States.

    Also notable, said Iliev, is the fact that three companies dominate the patent field on wind technology.

    Ultimately, Burns cautioned that “being too passionate could lead to unwise decisions” and we “need logical decisions based on sound evidence.” The IP system is, he said “an enabling factor” for innovation.

    Berbert agreed that climate change is an area that requires a massive amount of investment, but noted it is also “an area where the challenge before us is so great, we have to think about what kind of specific response patent law can provide us.”

    Kaitlin Mara may be reached at kmara@ip-watch.ch.

     

    Comments

    1. Roger says:

      We need to be careful that we don’t get caught rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. It would be sad to see the protection of intellectual property hampering our ability to solve global problems.

    2. Francois says:

      Why not patents with shorter life cycles for green technologies- less than 3 or 5 years for instance. That would allow investors to be ahead for a while. It could also stimulate and motivate investors for fast transfers.


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    We welcome your participation in article and blog comment threads, and other discussion forums, where we encourage you to analyse and react to the content available on the Intellectual Property Watch website. By participating in discussions or reader forums, or by submitting opinion pieces or comments to articles, blogs, reviews or multimedia features, you are consenting to these rules.

    We welcome your participation in article and blog comment threads, and other discussion forums, where we encourage you to analyse and react to the content available on the Intellectual Property Watch website.

    By participating in discussions or reader forums, or by submitting opinion pieces or comments to articles, blogs, reviews or multimedia features, you are consenting to these rules.

    1. You agree that you are fully responsible for the content that you post. You will not knowingly post content that violates the copyright, trademark, patent or other intellectual property right of any third party or which you know is under a confidentiality obligation preventing its publication and that you will request removal of the same should you discover that you have violated this provision. Likewise, you may not post content that is libelous, defamatory, obscene, abusive, that violates a third party's right to privacy, that otherwise violates any applicable local, state, national or international law, that amounts to spamming or that is otherwise inappropriate. You may not post content that degrades others on the basis of gender, race, class, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual preference, disability or other classification. Epithets and other language intended to intimidate or to incite violence are also prohibited. Furthermore, you may not impersonate others.

    2. You understand and agree that Intellectual Property Watch is not responsible for any content posted by you or third parties. You further understand that IP Watch does not monitor the content posted. Nevertheless, IP Watch may monitor the any user-generated content as it chooses and reserves the right to remove, edit or otherwise alter content that it deems inappropriate for any reason whatever without consent nor notice. We further reserve the right, in our sole discretion, to remove a user's privilege to post content on our site. IP Watch is not in any manner endorsing the content of the discussion forums and cannot and will not vouch for its reliability or otherwise accept liability for it.

    3. By submitting any contribution to IP Watch, you warrant that your contribution is your own original work and that you have the right to make it available to IP Watch for all purposes and you agree to indemnify IP Watch, its directors, employees and agents against all damages, legal fees and others expenses that may be incurred by IP Watch as a result of your breach of warranty or of these terms.

    4. You further agree not to publish any personal information about yourself or anyone else (for example telephone number or home address). If you add a comment to a blog, be aware that your email address will be apparent.

    5. IP Watch will not be liable for any loss including but not limited to the following (whether such losses are foreseen, known or otherwise): loss of data, loss of revenue or anticipated profit, loss of business, loss of opportunity, loss of goodwill or injury to reputation, losses suffered by third parties, any indirect, consequential or exemplary damages.

    6. You understand and agree that the discussion forums are to be used only for non-commercial purposes. You may not solicit funds, promote commercial entities or otherwise engage in commercial activity in our discussion forums.

    7. You acknowledge and agree that you use and/or rely on any information obtained through the discussion forums at your own risk.

    8. For any content that you post, you hereby grant to IP Watch the royalty-free, irrevocable, perpetual, exclusive and fully sub-licensable license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, perform and display such content in whole or in part, world-wide and to incorporate it in other works, in any form, media or technology now known or later developed.

    9. These terms and your posts and contributions shall be governed and interpreted in accordance with the laws of Switzerland (without giving effect to conflict of laws principles thereof) and any dispute exclusively settled by the Courts of the Canton of Geneva.