Climate change is a serious global issue that warrants examining its global
impacts. Green technology is the most essential measure in combating climate
change, but there are troubles concerning intellectual property (IP) rights.
This paper takes a look at the intricate interactions between climate change,
green technology, and IP, bringing different types of opportunities as well as
challenges under focus. The IP rights are core drivers in innovation or rather
in investment in green technologies. For instance, patents are able to protect
inventions, which allow companies to recover research and make money.
This is on the same side for trademarks regarding the purity of products,
boosting consumers' trust, and thus creating broader acceptance of a product.
Notwithstanding, IP rights also act as restrictions in the spread of and access
to green technologies. Certain patent monopolies might abuse their right and
demand so high licensing fees; thus, entry is restricted. Trade secrets impede
also knowledge sharing as they can slow down the process of developing green
solutions.
There are many types of policies and legal frameworks that could stimulate the
transfer and dissemination of green technologies. For example, open licensing
agreements could provide fair sharing of patented technologies, while technology
pools would foster collaborative IP sharing for fast-tracking innovative
processes. Governments are key players in supplying subsidies, tax credits, and
procurement policies to facilitate the uptake of green technology and enable
international cooperative initiatives and knowledge sharing to strengthen the
technology transfer.
Introduction:
Confronting climate change is arguably one of the most significant experiences
of our time. Innovation and technology will have to continue playing crucial
roles in the response to this challenge as part of their legacy. Technology is
used as a key mechanism for addressing climate change and managing its
consequences, and international agreements, national laws and policy initiatives
are testimony to this assertion. Technology development is mostly driven by
initiatives capable of being kept secret at the hands of the private sector,
typically protected by Intellectual Property Rights (IPR). These rights allow
limiting access to fruits from such innovation by other parties, thereby placing
several technologies critical in the fight against climate change in the hands
of too few individuals.
It is a really complex polycentric issue intertwined with technology and climate
change. There are continual debates on what moral and governance frameworks
should be drawn by all actors from the international level to local entities and
private organizations, especially regarding the role of IP in innovation. This
paper intends to address a particular legal challenge in the global political,
scientific, social, and legal context towards handling targeted legal solutions.
The study range is vast, yet it delves on certain aspects in-depth, primarily
looking at the intersection of IP laws and climate change and various public and
private perspectives they tend to raise.
Mitigation and adaptation measures against climate change have many special
implications for Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs), and conversely, the IPRs
also affect the pace and the extent to which developing countries would be able
to access technology for such efforts. Thus, important discussion exists on the
apparent need to reform IPR laws in order to dismantle the barriers to
international technology transfer.
The role of intellectual property rights (IPRs) in the fight against global
climate change has engendered fervid debate on the subject. In order to
effectively combat climate change, technological innovations need to be
promoted, more particularly ones geared at mitigating and adapting to its
effects. Many proponents maintain that IPRs-especially patent rights-are
indispensable for this technological development.
The Director of the United
States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) Michelle Lee says that the "patent
system is the key to foster its innovation in our economy." Apologists for
patents argue that without the possibility of strong patent protection,
companies would have to think twice before investing huge amounts of money into
research and development necessary for technological advancement. Thus, in this
sense, responses to global climate change exert tremendous influence over the
existence of robust patent protection.
Climate change and Its impacts:
Assessing the impact of climate change is fundamentally an intricate exercise
with uncertainties about the level of global warming in the future and the
collateral effects of that warming upon global activities themselves. While some
benefits accrue to global warming, there are various costs that come with it.
Then again, technological innovation remains an unknown factor that could impact
and therefore alter the course of global warming. Globally, warming is on the
rise.
Once a highly controversial and contested issue, the fact of global
warming- whether natural or anthropogenic-is now accepted across the globe. Most
countries within the international community are signatories to the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), thus an international
agreement on global warming mitigation. It follows, therefore, that members of
the UNFCCC are jointly committed to addressing climate change, which pertains,
whether directly or indirectly, to human activities that alter the composition
of the global atmosphere, along with the natural variability of the climate
system on timescales of interest. The growing international consensus regarding
the issues related to climate change was in some part made possible because of
the availability of credible scientific data on the causes and effects of global
warming.
These reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assess
and project climate change phenomena with varying degrees of credibility in the
sight of the world. IPCC, an intergovernmental scientific body, was established
by the United Nations Environment Program and the World Meteorological
Organization (WMO) to review and assess existing data on climate change and
provide "comprehensive and balanced scientific information to policymakers."
Confronting climate change is one of the major challenges of the 21st Century.
There remains a lot of debate over whether climate change is an issue of
present-day affairs aggravated by human activities or simply part of the natural
cycles of the Earth. But one thing is for sure: climate change affects societies
in various significant forms. In particular, emissions of greenhouse gases
affect the global temperature, hence causing rising sea levels that threaten
areas such as polar ice caps and low-lying Pacific islands or along the western
coast of Scotland. There are also increasing concerns regarding an increased
frequency of droughts, the emergence of new diseases, and negative implications
on human health.
Intellectual Property Rights: A Challenge or a Tool for Addressing Climate
Change
IP law as it is today has often the ethical obligation to compensate inventors.
The purpose of IPRs is to result in investment and innovation motivated in the
end to benefit all people as a result. On the contrary, a society can be harmed
due to failure in establishing IPRs in that inventors and producers may be
unmotivated.
This paper states that IPRs could become instrumental in assisting global
efforts to avert severe climate change. Certainly, there is an opposing
viewpoint. The very terms of extractive IPR have the potential to restrain our
innovative efforts toward solutions to the impending environmental crises. This
paradox has been interpreted in a number of ways.
Some scholarly commentators
take the view that the intellectual property framework will not promote adequate
action to mitigate climate change as it does not encourage the kind of broad
scientific advancements, especially in energy, necessary to head off the worst
climate scenarios. Others argue that the intellectual property system is
inadequate to promote climate solutions as it exacerbates the North-south
barrier instead of facilitating technology transfer to developing countries. A
common thread runs through both critical statements, encapsulated in an
essential claim that intellectual property law is hardly fulfilling its primary
objective.
The author interrogates a pertinent question as to whether it is the
intellectual property rights that obstruct innovation in climate change
mitigation by way of concentrating in the short term on the most profitable
technologies. It assumes that past measures will spur on the future generation
to develop less certain and less profitable climate-change technologies when the
urgency of the crisis dawns before them.
The right utility of intellectual property must be comprehended if all of these
questions are to be resolved. The scope of protected ideas and the reasoning
behind granting them a judicial recognition of property will determine how
climate change policymakers address and grapple with the temporality of their
issues. Historically, attributing everything solely to intellectual property
rights has proven to be a naive and unsophisticated thinker's game. Simply
stating that the IP system is flawed does not lead to any meaningful way
forward; proposing a solution based on a flawed diagnosis is a surefire way of
misdirecting scarce resources towards a solution that is, at best, ineffective
and worst, completely inappropriate. Thus, the foremost task is to come to a
clear view of what the issue really is before moving to discuss solutions.
Focusing on the issues in the light of an adjusted perspective becomes crucial
to handling the supposed ill concerning the infringement of intellectual
property rights. This reframing makes one think about whether the intellectual
property system's functioning or failure in the context of its basic premise is
the real question. Instead of proposing fresh laws concerning intellectual
property, one might be better off sketching out a set of parameters with which
existing laws may themselves be evaluated and reformed.
This is especially
important given that the intellectual property system tends to reward solutions
for problems yielding fast cash, such as diabetes, obesity, and impotence,
rather than stimulating solutions for long-term issues that are still barely
recognized, conceptualized, or valued. The time dimension of the existing
intellectual property legal framework is the central theme of this paper; in its
turn, climate change considerations press for an entirely different line of
thought. The need for international acceleration and dissemination of low-carbon
technologies, above all, establishes the link between time and given
institutions and legal frameworks.
Strategies for addressing the Intellectual Property Rights Challenges in the
context of Climate change
The patent dilemma is best solved with a focus on laws, policies, and
institutions rather than a purely individual effort. Individual action, however,
can have significant impact as these persons push universities, industries, and
governments to adopt appropriate policies.
The modalities of dealing with the IPR challenge can be categorized into the
following dominant strips: maintain the existing IPR regime; amend the same; and
abolish IPR altogether. The present paper does not propound to be an exhaustive
search for all available possible strategies but intends to highlight some of
the more prominent ones.
Push Mechanisms and Legislative Reform:
The IPR system creates not just incentives for R&D; it thereby also relies for
recognition upon national governments in industrialized countries, which, in
many cases, pay for research through competitive grant systems targeting
university researchers. A plurality of non-profit foundations also provide
funding for research, utilizing more or less the same competitive grant way of
doing things.
In most instances, these governments and foundations give
preference for R&D that serve national interests and help corporations in the
endeavor of commercializing the related R&D output. This kind of funding is
called "push mechanism" because it gives initial monetary support to R&D
efforts, expecting a product that would be of worth.
One might assume at least the push mechanisms, particularly the publicly funded
university research through competitive grants, could somehow avoid the IPR
dilemma. But this ignores the fact that the outcomes of publicly funded research
seldom remain in the public domain. In many Cases, they can be patented and, in
fact, are patented in the USA and in many other countries.
This shows a clear plan: repeal of the Bayh-Dole Act and comparable laws that
facilitate the privatization of publicly funded research. The author finds the
proposal attractive, but a few important issues need to be tackled. To begin
with, the repeal of these acts would offer rather stiff political opposition,
being that they are strongly backed by interests in the industry, and no
concrete movement promoting their repeal exists currently.
More importantly, CCT-related research in developed countries done by universities or governments
does not entail a promise that corporations will not seek to utilize it to
develop IP technologies of their own. In essence, therefore, while
Bayh-Dole-like repeal may provide an attractive foot in the door, seeing to it
that technologies become developed free of IP protection will demand a lot more.
This would require a robust level of commitment from governments or other
parties not just to research but also to the nurturing of technologies that are
IP-free.
Parallel Pull Mechanisms:
The first approach attempts to use push mechanisms to stimulate the invention of
climate change technologies (CCTs) with little or no protection under IPR laws
to deal with the IPR challenge. This strategy will require amendments to
existing laws and several reforms for successful implementation. The second
approach offers a concept called "parallel pull mechanisms," which serve to
stimulate activities in research and development (R&D) that meet specified
success criteria through rewards to innovators.
One form of pull mechanisms is
patenting; other forms are technology inducement prizes, which typically provide
direct financial rewards with an option for patent protection. Proponents of
pull mechanisms argue that they are more effective than push mechanisms, for
they do not fund unsuccessful or trite projects and spur researchers on to work
fast and efficiently. Parallel pull mechanisms are those which run alongside the
patent regime, where accepting an innovation reward effectively disqualifies the
possibility of patenting the innovation.
Historically, technology inducement prizes have played an important role in
stimulating R&D efforts. A worthy historical example is the prize offered by the
British government in 1714 for the invention of a device capable of determining
longitude with accuracy. The contemporary instance is the Ansari-X Prize to spur
innovations relating to commercial space travel. In terms of climate change,
billionaire Richard Branson has announced the offering of a $25 million prize
for creating an environmentally friendly and economically viable mechanism for
extracting greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.
As previously stated, prizes for the inducement of technology do not in
themselves resolve the intellectual property (IP) challenge. Many of these
prizes would leave an option for patenting open, and many proponents of prizes
argue that they should be compatible with patents. For example, Adler argues
that with the urgent threat of global climate change, there needs to be more
than patents to get something done.
In the proposal he references, he quotes a
study by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, which argues that federal
agencies like the National Science Foundation (NSF) should issue technology
inducement prizes and also not claim ownership or control over any intellectual
property produced by prize-seeking participants. Participants should be allowed
to exercise control over their innovations. In addition, most technology
inducement prizes do not really encourage the equitable sharing of technologies;
rather, those prizes are given for development rather than distribution, with
the assumption that market forces will bring ample access to the technology.
One way in which inducement prizes for technology might deal with the problem of
IP would be to make contingent receipt of prize awards on the relinquishment of
intellectual property rights. No corresponding pull mechanism has ever been
proposed for CCTs so far. However, a construct like this with a focus on
"pulling" specifically designed to address the problems posed by global climate
change could be a practical solution for the possibly very deep IP dilemmas they
might create.
Conclusion:
Global climate change is the urgent challenge that needs to be faced
immediately. Some solutions, including dismantling the international
intellectual property rights (IPR) framework, seem, in theory, to be effective
but often prove inadequate for urgent issues. Certainty about which options
would be in use in the near future is in itself speculative; for instance, some
calamity may strike and within a few years, IPRs may altogether be abolished.
Absolute predictions notwithstanding, we can make reasonable assumptions
regarding likely outcomes. To all available indications, there are compelling
reasons to believe that strategies can be arrived at and initiated earlier. A
pragmatic approach, taking into account the political, economic, and legal
realities, is most likely to lead this process after initiation.
There has been little progress over the past twenty years in providing
international responses to the clean technology transfer to developing
countries. As climate change develops and technology progresses, the framework
of intellectual property rights and arguments concerning technology access can
be expected to quickly become obsolete.
Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) must either be changed or removed to further
reduce Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions within the principles of intergenerational
justice. This process requires trust to be built between developed and
developing countries. If such trust is not nurtured, one of the hurdles will be
a mutual understanding of shared-and-proportional responsibilities involving
technology development and transfer, of which IPRs remain largely an important
factor.
Developed countries must take the lead by demonstrating their commitment
by swiftly reducing their GHG emissions to build this trust. Such trust could be
strengthened further if the richer countries play their part through adequate
contributions to the Green Climate Fund and other international organizations
engaged in technology transfer. IPR systems must quickly undergo reform to bring
about changes in the incentive structure to eliminate the bottlenecks for the
growth and dissemination of low-carbon technologies.
Without fostering such trust and embedding the requisite safeguards, future
generations may have to pay dearly. In terms of IPRs, it means that whatever is
subject to protection may find diminished importance or total irrelevance. This
especially applies to biological resources and matters even more in the context
of dealing with severe climate change. And besides, catastrophic climate change
challenges any meaningfulness to the whole realm of IPR's application. Thus,
several vital aspects of existing IPR systems would presuppose the truth of
something that no longer may be valid in a future where catastrophic climate
changes are a present concern.
In the past, the chief reason for granting private monopolistic rights-protected
forms used for the promotion of creativity leading to the enhancement and
enrichment of an ever-growing pool of ideas-was the belief in a constant
trajectory of wealth and prosperity. These basic assumptions are now being
fundamentally questioned with the existential threat posed by climate change.
Reference:
- Climate Change And Intellectual Property Rights | Law column
- Intellectual property rights and the international transfer of climate change mitigating technologies - ScienceDirect
- Climate Change, Intellectual Property, and the Scope of Human Rights Obligations
- Intellectual Property in the Age of the Environmental Crisis: How Trademarks and Copyright Challenge the Human Right to a Healthy Environment | IIC - International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law
- Intellectual property rights and the transfer of climate change technologies: issues, challenges, and way forward: Climate Policy: Vol 15 , No 1 - Get Access
- Climate change and intellectual property rights - iPleaders
- Intellectual-Property-Rights.pdf
- Intellectual Property in the Age of Climate Change: Balancing Innovation and Sustainability through Green Technology by Aayush Bhardwaj, Heena Parveen :: SSRN
- Can intellectual property rights within climate technology transfer work for the UNFCCC and the Paris Agreement?
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