Title: Technology Transfer between Public Research and Industry
1Technology Transfer between Public Research and
Industry Laws, Models and Policy Options
2Technology Transfer between Public Research and
Industry Laws, Models and Policy Options
- The views and opinions expressed in this
presentation are those of the author and they do
not represent the position of the European Joint
Research Center or the European Community at
large -
3Intellectual Asset Management in the Public
Research Enterprise
- Maximizing Public Good (social return) or
maximizing financial (private) return - Internationally, the leaders in tech transfer
have managed to create revenues of up to 5 of
their research expenditure - gt There are in fact social returns that should be
weighed in the overall analysis
4Intellectual asset management by PROs
Link to Venture Capital
Technology Pool
Coop. RD mature companies
Licensing
Start-Up Companies
Non-excl. Who owns what?
Exclusive Joint Venture Equity
Quasi-excl. Field of Use
5Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ?
- Historically, little co-operative RD in the US
- More focus on licensing and start-ups (beginning
in about the mid 1980s) an effect of Bayh-Dole - In Europe much more interest in project based
co-operation with the private sector gt one
example is the European Framework Research
Programmes - However, limited IP and licensing infrastructure
at European PROs - In recent years, both sides are trying to adopt
some of the features of the other model
6Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ?
- Historically, little co-operative RD in the US
- Throughout most of the 1960s and 1970s, the
business community was the source of 3 of total
research performed in universities. - By the mid 1980s this had risen to 6 and in
the 1990s to 7 - Source Wendy H. Schacht, CRS Report for
Congress RD Partnerships and IP, Implications
for US Policy, December 2000
7Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ?
- The preferred mechanism of German industrial
support for academic research is a research
contract with clearly defined deliverables. In
the US, most industrial funding of academic RD
takes the form of grants, more open-ended
arrangements without specifically defined
research deliverables... - Source Technology Transfer Systems in the
United States and Germany, Lessons and
Perspectives, German American Academic Council
Foundation, National Academy of Sciences 1997
8Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ?
- .the panel judges university-industry research
interaction in Germany to be more heavily
oriented toward short-term, incremental problem
solving than university-industry linkages in the
United States. - Source Technology Transfer Systems in the
United States and Germany, Lessons and
Perspectives, German American Academic Council
Foundation, National Academy of Sciences 1997
9Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ?
- Some European Research Universities now receive
up to 40 percent of their research budgets from
private sources on a project contract basis -
- Example RWTH Aachen
- Total budget (excl. hospital) 367 Mio
- Research Budget 142,5 Mio
- Source RWTH Drittmittelreport 2003
10Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ?
- This particular university currently lists as
assignee (or co-assignee) on 42 patents - Hits 42 (Total hits 42)
- 2 DE000020313514U1 DE Chirurgische
Haltevorrichtung - 3 DE000019850026A1 DE Verfahren und Vorrichtung
zur Herstellung texturierter Garne aus ... - 4 DE000019813887A1 DE Verfahren und Vorrichtung
zur Herstellung von Nähnähten - 5 DE000019750523A1 DE Verfahren zur Herstellung
verrippter Bauteile nach der Gasinjektionstechnik
... - 6 DE000019715630C2 DE Vorrichtung und Verfahren
zur Bestimmung rheologischer Werkstoffdaten - Source DEPATISnet, German Patent Office
11Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ?
- Chirurgische Haltevorrichtung
- ApplicantPA Aesculap AG Co. KG, 78532
Tuttlingen, DE RWTH Aachen, 52062 Aachen, DE - InventorIN
- Application dateAD 26.08.2003
- Application numberAN 20313514
- Country of applicationAC DE
- Publication datePUB 15.01.2004
- Priority dataPRC
- IPC main classICM A61B 19/00
- IPC subclassICS F16M 11/12 F16M 11/14
- IPC additional information on descriptionICA A61B
1/00 A61B 17/16 - Source DEPATISnet, German Patent Office
12Intellectual asset management Which focus at
RWTH?
Link to Venture Capital
Technology Pool
Coop. RD mature companies
Licensing
Start-Up Companies
Non-excl. Who owns what?
Exclusive Joint Venture Equity
Quasi-excl. Field of Use
13Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ?
- RWTH chose Collaborative Research almost as its
only path to commercialisation - RWTH is claiming involvement in over 200 start-up
companies since 1995 but they never held equity
or any IP that was important to these start-ups gt
no IP, no licenses - Source RWTH Drittmittelreport 2003
14Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ? Some Data on the
US
- Research budget of 200-400 Mio
- Columbia University (407.4 Mio sponsored
research) - 191 US patents filed in FY 2002
- 55 new licenses/options in FY 2002
- 155.6 Mio gross license income
- 60 US patents issued
- 8 start-up companies formed
- Source AUTM Licensing Survey 2002
15Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ? Some Data on the
US
- University of Florida (369.25 Mio sponsored
research - 207 US patents filed in FY 2002
- 59 new licenses / options executed
- 31.6 Mio gross license income
- 62 US patents issued that year
- 5 start-up companies formed
- Source AUTM Licensing Survey 2002
16Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ? Some aggregate
US Data
- Gross license income received 1.337 billion
- 10,866 licenses yielding income
- Invention disclosures received 15,573
- Total US applications filed 12,929
- New US applications filed 7,741
- US Patents issued 3,673
- Start-up companies formed since 1980 4,320
still operational 2,741 - Source AUTM Licensing Survey 2002
17Intellectual Property Licensing by PROs in
Germany
- Fraunhofer, and to a lesser extent Helmholtz and
the universities, focus heavily on collaborative
RD - IP positions regularly compromised as a
consequence - Only Max-Planck (Garching Innovation GmbH) and
Fraunhofer Patent Center achieved maturity (major
revenues, involvement in litigation, management
of big portfolios) in IP licensing - With the abolishment of the Professors privilege
in 2002, 18 regional IP licensing companies were
founded with federal sponsorship - These companies each work with a number of
universities in the regions - These programmes have remained marginal so far
- Both industry as well as some public research
organisations are trying to undermine these
activities by the universities
18Patent applications of German PROs
Source Turning Science into Business, OECD, 2003
19Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ?
- No University licensing data available in Germany
- Reason Up to 2002, licensing was mainly done by
the individual inventors because of the
Professors privilege - However, our 1996 study for the Federal Ministry
of Science showed that 60 of the inventions
were assigned to industry partners in most
cases without or with minimal compensation
Source Becher, Gering, Lang, Schmoch
Patentwesen an Hochschulen, BMBF 1996
20Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ? - UK
- Commercialisation activities in the university
sector have substantially increased in the last
five years - Many universities only created technology
transfer offices in the late 1990s - Staff numbers are still rising by almost 25 per
annum - Internationally, the UK lags behind the US in its
expertise in technology transfer, although the UK
is ahead of much of the rest of Europe - Lack of clarity over IP in research
collaborations - A minimum of annual investment in research needed
in order to justify a technology transfer office
only 25 of UK universities seem to have such
critical mass, yet 80 are now running their own
offices - gt Still struggling with restructuring after BTG
disappeared as the sole solution in 1985
Source The Lambert Review of Business-University
Interaction, Dezember 2003
21Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ? Other notable
models
- Chalmers University in Gothenburg, Sweden
- Privatized the whole university now operates as
an AB - Technology transfer is a huge operation being
responsible for all contract research, an
incubator, a technology park, etc. - But Sweden lived under a Professors privilege
system which is still very much defining the
mindset - Private IP exploitation company in the incubator
- University of Twente, the Netherlands
- Probably the European University concentrating
most on spin-off creation very early on (1980s) - But again, IAM on behalf of the University is not
at center stage in this effort
22Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ? Legal basis - USA
- Bayh-Dole Act P.L. 96-517 as amended
- Stephenson Wydler Technology Innovation Act P.L.
96-418 - Bayh-Dole
- Doing away with 26 different regulations used by
public US research funding bodies - For the first time, a uniform policy was
implemented that provided the contractor with the
opportunity to elect to retain title to
inventions
23Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ? Legal basis - USA
- to replace the existing melange of 26
different agency policies on vesting of patent
rights in government funded research.with a
single, uniform national policy designed to cut
down on bureaucracy and encourage private
industry to utilize government funded inventions
through the commitment of the risk capital
necessary to develop such inventions to the point
of commercial application. - Source House Committee on the Judiciary, 1980
24Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ? Legal basis - USA
- If contractor retains title, obligation to
exploit arises reporting requirements - Although there was university patenting before
Bayh-Dole (IPAs), patenting and certainly
licensing rose by about 20 times in the last 20
years - Government has march-in rights and can require a
non-exclusive license for its own purposes - Just giving ownership to industry contractors
does not necessarily stimulate use in the markets
25Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ? Legal Basis
- In the EU, concern that different national laws
re the ownership and exploitation of IP from
PROs, especially at universities, may create
barriers to international collaborative research - Austria, Denmark, Germany and Norway have
recently introduced new legislation to grant
universities title to IP resulting from publicly
funded research - In Finland proposals to the same effect
- In Japan and Korea, recent reforms in funding
regulations to this effect - These policy trends echo the landmark US
Bayh-Dole Act of 1980 - Source OECD, Turning Science into Business, 2003
26Which way should Public Research Organisations
PROs (incl. universities) go ? Legal Basis
internationally
- Either there is employer-employee law defining
ownership (Germany, Austria) - Or there is just common law/case law/individual
agreements (US) - Or there is some regulation in patent law
defining rights of the employee (UK, France) - And then there are research sponsorship
agreements (do not affect employer-employee
relation but define ownership and exploitation
framework in projects funded with certain -
public funds) - On the European level (research framework
programmes) such sponsorship agreements can
become extremely complex as these are generally
consortium deals involving numerous partners
27Todays Technology Environment
28The Starting Point Defining Innovation
- Invention v. innovation
- Sustaining v. disruptive innovation (aka
incremental v. radical)
29Characteristics of Disruptive Technology
- Less profitable in the early years
- May need long periods of time before market
introduction (health care) - Need mass market acceptance to achieve full value
- Cheaper, smaller, simpler, more convenient
30The Knowledge Economy
- Protected knowledge now at the core of company
valuation - Intangibles are now driving market cap
- Asset Management maintains the lead for up to two
decades sometimes even longer - No diminishing returns
31The Knowledge Economy
- In certain industries, patents significantly
raise the costs incurred by non patent-holders
wishing to use the idea or invent around a patent
an estimated 40 in the pharma sector, 30
for major new chemicals, and are thus viewed as
important. - However, in other industries, patents have much
smaller impact on the cost associated with the
imitation (e.g. in the 7 15 range for
electronics) and are considered less successful
in protecting investment. - Source Mansfield, Imitation costs and Patents,
in The Economics of Technical Change, 1981
32Technological Change Technology Push versus
Market Pull
33Technology Push Looking for a Problem
34Intellectual asset management Technology Push
versus Market Pull
Link to Venture Capital
Technology Pool
Coop. RD mature companies
Licensing
Start-Up Companies
Non-excl. Who owns what?
Exclusive Joint Venture Equity
Quasi-excl. Field of Use
35Speech Recognition what are the real customer
needs? Or as Ozzy said Radio ON!!
36Primary Disruptive Technologies for Next Decade
- Gene Therapy
- Nanotechnology
- Wireless
- Other ??
37Why are Disruptive Technologies Important?
38Importance of radical innovation
- Because it was in disruptive technologies that
productivity growth was highest over the last 4
decades - ICT
- Biotech
- Most of this productivity growth achieved by new
players, not by existing companies - PROs well suited to drive radical innovation
39The Technology Transfer Process at PROs
40How to position a PRO in the market
- What is the customer base?
- Are the customers prepared, able and willing to
do RD collaborations? - Does this apply to all technology sectors the PRO
represents? - Or do you have to use a custom approach in
different technological fields?
41Intellectual asset management by PROs
Link to Venture Capital
Technology Pool
Coop. RD mature companies
Licensing
Start-Up Companies
Non-excl. Who owns what?
Exclusive Joint Venture Equity
Quasi-excl. Field of Use
42Local, Regional Customer base
- Mainly SMEs ? High Tech ?
- Multinationals ?
- Incentives available ? Government co-financing ?
- Taxes ?
43Local, Regional Customer base
- What do you do if there is no such thing ?
- Multinationals ?
- Engage in company formation and business
development ? - But that changes the requirements completely !
44Requirements
- What is it? Tech commercialization is a parallel
process of radical and incremental innovation,
the determination of technical and business
feasibility, the creation of intellectual assets,
and the development of a plan to enter the
market. - Why do it? To build sustainable companies
45Requirements
- You will only be able to attract investors if
your Intellectual Asset Management (IAM) approach
is effective - IP in general, trade secrets and confidential
know-how are the building blocks for such an IAM
programme - That makes the national legal system re ownership
and exploitation of PRO results so important gt If
you cannot manage your assets effectively for the
sake of the investor you will have no business !
46Conclusions
- Technology Transfer, IP management and
licensing by PROs has to be seen in the broader
perspective of how the individual, national
research and innovation system is structured - More collaborative research and research
funding by industry will make it more difficult
to maintain freedom to operate - If freedom to operate exists for PROs, mature
programmes require significant lead time and
professionalism - OECD 2003 (Turning Science into Business) On
average, PROs engaged in Intellectual Asset
Management need more than seven years to break
even - US-Policy considerations Jobs created (more
than 300000), 3 billion in taxes generated (1
billion royalties), sourceAUTM
47Thomas Gering Ph.D.
- Thomas.Gering_at_iam-corp.net
-