Title: ICTSD-UNCTAD Regional Dialogue on IPR, Innovation
1IP Tools, Innovation Commercialisation of IP
- Options to assist developing countries in
positioning themselves to reap the benefits of a
stronger IP regime, with special reference to the
role of IP management in research organisations - Rosemary Wolson
- Intellectual Property Manager UCT Innovation
- University of Cape Town
- 021-650-2425/083-784-3648
- Rosemary.Wolson_at_UCT-Innovation.co.za
2Context
- TRIPS here to stay
- Reduced flexibility in implementing IPRs
- Need to acquire, absorb diffuse technology
- IPRs as enabler or obstacle?
- Role of research organisations in promoting
development - Especially indigenous innovation
- Situated within broader policy framework
- Tailored to needs environment
- Not proposing a solution
- But a step towards one?
3University Knowledge Technology Transfer
Basic applied research
Know-how IP
Knowledge technology transfer
Revenue
Commercial- isation economic benefit
Publication academic benefit
To community social benefit
4Institutional Technology Transfer
- Relationship between academic/public sector
research private sector - TTO as facilitator
- Research contracts (incl collaboration
agreements) - Publication
- Freedom-to-operate
- IP
- Licensing
- Policy/regulatory affairs
- Research innovation value chain
5Research Innovation Value Chain
Research
Invention disclosure
Intellectual Property
Licencing
Spin-out company
6US Bayh-Dole Act (1980)
- To remedy situation in which federal govt owned
IP arising from federally-funded research, but
failed to exploit it - Recipients of federal grants given right to own
IP, in exchange for undertaking to exploit it - Report
- Seek patent protection
- Take active steps to commercialise
- Share income with inventors
- Use balance for research or educational purposes
7Bayh-Dole Licence Conditions
- Exclusive or non-exclusive
- US govt entitled to non-exclusive, worldwide,
royalty-free licence - March-in rights of US govt
- If in the public interest
- Manufacture substantially in US
- Preference to small business
8Benefits of Bayh-Dole
- New products on the market
- Job creation
- New businesses established
- Typically close to licensing university
- Tax revenue
- Regional economic development
- Or would these benefits have been generated
notwithstanding?
9Other Experiences
- Similar TTO model adopted
- But usually without Bayh-Dole-type legislation
- Very mixed data on ROI
- Substantial investment needed
- Time lag to realise returns 10 years
- Lack of skilled staff
- Patent marketing costs
- US average around 3 of research budget
- UK average closer to 1 of research budget
- Europe even lower?
10Options for Developing Country Institutions
- Bearing in mind severe pressure on resources
- Distinguish appropriate roles
- Pre-licensing TTO
- Licensing TTO
- Broad definition of TTO
- Minimal functions eg reduce risks
- Active facilitation of collaboration
- Regulatory affairs compliance
- Licensing
- Tailor according to needs
11Options for Licensing Practices (I)
- Strategic patenting
- Licensing prefered over assignment
- Non-exclusive v exclusive licensing
- Exclusivity where licensee can practice
- Appropriate fields of use, territories, duration
- Minimum performance/diligence provisions
- Open source as a model
12Options for Licensing Practices (II)
- Market segmentation
- Incl differential pricing
- Developing v developed country markets
- Public v private sector
- Requirement to deliver in developing countries
- Compulsory sub-licensing incl know-how
- Humanitarian use clauses
- Preference for local firms
- Donation of technologies unlikely to yield
profits or serving public interest
13Points to Consider
- Not an exhaustive list
- A licence a contract subject to negotiation
- Influenced by parties respective bargaining
power - How to ensure that technology is made easily
accessible to those who can benefit from it - Must be determined case-by-case - on the whole
14Supportive Policies (I)
- Motivation for govt intervention
- Main benefits captured outside institution in
broader economy - Bayh-Dole?
- UK Lambert Report
- SA low proportion of unencumbered research
15Supportive Policies (II)
- Training capacity-building
- Learning by doing, context-specific
- Funding for patent filing, prosecution
marketing - Centralised TTO
- National or regional
- Limitations
- Potential benefits
16Complementary Policies
- Rooted in a well-functioning national system of
innovation - Co-ordination of efforts of different government
depts, agencies stakeholders - Avoid duplication
- Avoid conflicts
- Seek synergies
17RD Support
- Increased public spending on RD
- Incentives for promoting private RD investment
- Tax relief
- Matched funding
- PPPs
- Environment conducive to attracting
- FDI
- Tech transfer (international)
- Meaningful research collaboration
- Support for local firms and research institutions
to exploit their IP
18IP-Related Mechanismsto Explore
- Taking advantage of TRIPS flexibilities where
available - Must be appropriate to national context
- Sui generis rights for protection exploitation
of IKS - Utility models/petty patents
- Geographical indications
- ABS for protection of biodiversity
- Competition law
19Bilateral
- Balancing undertakings for stronger IP protection
with measures to ensure that users of system can
ultimately benefit - Medium- to long-term objective
- Capacity-building
- Tech transfer (including know-how)
- Provision of research infrastructure
- Genuine collaborations
20Multilateral
- Alignment of countries with similar interests to
lobby - Co-ordinating role of multilateral institutions
- Clearing-house facilities
- Administration of multilateral funds
- Facilitation of tech transfer of technologies of
particular public interest - Multilateral agreement on access to basic science
and technology?