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Is IP Standing in the Way of a Green Planet?

Eric Raciti, Patent Attorney and Nicole Parsons, Ph.D.
November 05, 2010  |  6 Comments

The potential of intellectual property rights to impede the cleantech revolution has sparked a lively debate full of heated rhetoric. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu jump-started this discussion last year during a discussion of the Obama administration's goals to promote development of green technologies.

Addressing the importance of international collaboration, Secretary Chu said “we should work very hard in a very collaborative way - by very collaborative I mean share all intellectual property as much as possible.”  This suggestion, extreme on its face, reminds us that IP rights play an important role in the climate change debate and must be meaningfully addressed at a global level. 

The fundamental importance of IP is a maxim of U.S. business echoed throughout the cleantech industry.  The ability to acquire and enforce IP rights allows innovative green start-up companies to spur discovery, attract financing, defend growing markets, and increase revenues.  A new World Economic Forum report Accelerating Successful Smart Grid Pilots discussing the central role of policy-makers and regulators in creating the right conditions for innovation acknowledged that “it is critical that they offer upside to the innovators to allow them to benefit from the intellectual property that they are developing, while encouraging the best practices to be shared and adopted elsewhere.”

Embodying this pro-business pro-IP position is the recently-formed Coalition for Innovation, Development & Employment Alliance (or “IDEA”).  This group, which was launched by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and industry leaders shortly after Secretary’s Chu’s remarks, has the stated mission of “champion[ing] the role of innovation and creativity in creating jobs” by protecting strong intellectual property rights globally.  IDEA urges that the continued growth of the cleantech industry, which has the potention to produce millions of new American jobs, depends on strong IP rights.  The group has lobbied hard to prevent erosion of the U.S. patent system.

In the opposite corner from the “IP fundamentalists” are those who believe that IP rights challenge the deployment of innovative green technologies to developing countries.  Because meeting future global targets for reducing carbon emissions will involve these countries, they should be granted access to the most efficient available technologies by reducing the barriers to use patented technologies.

The perceived tension between relying on strong IP rights to promote cleantech innovations and enabling global access to these technologies has been analogized to the fight for access to patented lifesaving medicines in developing and underdeveloped countries. The international Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) set out minimum standards for IP regimes for a country to join the World Trade Organization (WTO), and anticipated that in some instances compulsory licensing may be appropriate.  And indeed the Doha Declaration, adopted in 2001, affirms the flexibility of WTO member states to relax patent rights to improve access to essential medicines, and has successfully increased access to HIV drugs.

The fight for increasing the transfer of green technology is being waged within the ongoing United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) meetings.  At the 2010 Copenhagen negotiations, efforts to reach a binding agreement for IP and technology transfer issues were unsuccessful. Although there is consensus that clean technology must be disseminated worldwide, negotiations stalled over IP policies. 

Two of the four options considered involved compulsory licensing proposals, in which a government is given permission to practice a patented invention without the patent owner’s consent.  The U.S. vigorously opposes compulsory licensing  - the House of Representatives even passed a bill in June 2009 to provide for the protection of IP rights of U.S. persons in other countries.  Voluntary licensing schemes, which are more politically viable, are more flexible and allow IP holders to choose to participate.  Other approaches include creating incentives for sharing green technologies, creating common pools into which cleantech companies could devote some IP rights, and creating simplified licenses with reduced terms for sustainable uses of some IP. 

Characterizing the debate for broadened access to cleantech IP as a “battle” unnecessarily amplifies the distance between two imperatives: promoting innovation to develop the technology we need to combat climate change, and ensuring its global implementation.  Between a hardcore compulsory licensing regime and a pure IP fundamentalist approach lies ample room to craft policies which further both of these goals.  If each side listens carefully to the other, there is no reason we can’t find pragmatic ways to structure IP rights to both incentivize research and development and serve the public interest.

Eric Raciti, left, is a partner in the Cambridge, Massachusetts office of Finnegan. Mr. Raciti focuses his practice on intellectual property counseling, particularly in the fields of alternative energy and medical devices. You can learn more about Mr. Raciti by accessing his profile, here.


Nicole Parsons (left), Ph.D., is an Associate at Finnegan. Dr. Parsons’ practices includes client counseling, U.S. and international patent prosecution, portfolio management, and provides infringement, validity, patentability and freedom-to-operate opinions, primarily in life sciences. Dr. Parsons also works on various patent litigation matters.

 

6 Comments

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ANONYMOUS
November 25, 2010
In the renewable energy sector, the biggest IP legal battle is between GE and Mitsubishi over GE's DFIG wind turbine patents. If there's any question about what side Sec. Chu and the Obama Administration are on, consider that GE has received tens of billions in grants and loan guarantees from the US feds in the past 2 years.
Douglas Prince
Douglas Prince
November 10, 2010
JimW - Nope. In fact, China is the world renowned leader in plagiarizing/stealing/copying/counterfeiting just about any product/idea/system in the world. If they can get their hands on it, you can bet you'll ten million copies of it in about a month.
Ralph Perez
Ralph Perez
November 9, 2010
Problems occur when the inventor/developer are over compensated. When using knowledge that was based (or built) from common platforms, compensation from the developed product needs to be "put back" into the platform.
As this occurs in the field of education, (using internet based interactivity as a mass teaching tool), more possible inventors are created. The sharing of "education" helps build a stronger platform for further deveopment.
Jim Warden
Jim Warden
November 7, 2010
The people at GreenGas.cc have a machine that makes low cost, clean fuel from air and water.There is 4 billion dollars a day fuel sold daily in America.Investors come to take a look and see that the technology is real and working. But one of them said to me they hesitate. If the chinese see the machine and copy it, there is nothing to stop them from flooding the world with low cost copies. Or is there?
Andrew W
Andrew W
November 5, 2010
Of course Dr. Chu wants access to ideas because HE and the DOE don't have any. I would prefer if they simply offered prize money. Collaboration is over-rated. Most of the world's biggest discoveries and inventions came from individuals.

If we loosen the value of IP we will put the final nail in the coffin of innovation. It's bad enough in America that we don't respect our innovators and we hear everyday from politicians that they're "creating jobs." Ideas and innovation creates jobs.

Offer prize money Dr. Chu and maybe you see some results. Stop wasting DOE and stimulus funds on "development deals" and put up, or shut up.
justin blows
justin blows
November 5, 2010
Disappointingly, this article fails to answer: Is IP impeding or advancing the spread of climate change technologies?

Firstly, many reports shows that there are few foreign owned renewable energy patents in developing nations because there are too many barriers such as poor governance, lack of energy policy, trade barriers, lack of skilled people, capital, and manufacturing base etc. It is not patents stopping deployment of renewable energy technology in developing countries.

Secondly, the state of renewable energy IP is misunderstood. There is plenty of good renewable technology that is not covered by patents. Developments in these developed fields are incremental. A patent for an increment can not lock down the use of a fundamental principle eg. using the sun to generate electricity.

Thirdly it is only right that the person/company that spent time, energy and money to develop an increment be rewarded. To take the invention without compensation (eg. payment) is theft. You may not agree but if ideas companies generate at cost are always stolen they will not be profitable and thus non viable. Then there will be no new innovations - and that is very bad. Governments have largely vacated renewable energy technology development, leaving companies as the innovators. Developments in renewable technology are highly dependent on nurturing and protection of innovative companies.

Fourthly, what exactly, from a legal perspective, are you transferring in a technology transfer deal without patents? A patent provides a very well defined legal right that can be used in a deal such as a joint venture. This issue goes to the heart of human interactions - without patents a fair trade is difficult to define and achieve. Without trade, there will be close enougth to no technology transfer to the needy developing nations, which is bad for everybody on earth.

For more on this, have a look at www.cleanip.com.au

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Eric Raciti

Eric Raciti

Eric Raciti is a resident partner in the Brussels, Belgium office of Finnegan. Mr. Raciti focuses his practice on intellectual property counseling, particularly in the fields of alternative energy and medical devices. Among the diverse...
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