---
abstract: |
  Who does publicly funded scientific innovation belong to?
archive-url: "https://web.archive.org/web/20230908215726/https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/a-patent-conundrum/"
author:
- Pranesh Prakash
authors:
- Pranesh Prakash
categories:
- A2K
- IPR
citation:
  abstract: Who does publicly funded scientific innovation belong to?
  accessed: 2019-01-15
  archive: "https://web.archive.org/web/20230908215726/https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/a-patent-conundrum/"
  author: Pranesh Prakash
  available-date:
    date-parts:
    - - 2010
      - 2
      - 19
    iso-8601: 2010-02-19
    literal: 2010-02-19
    raw: 2010-02-19
  citation-key: prakashPatentConundrum2010
  container-title: Indian Express
  issued:
    date-parts:
    - - 2010
      - 2
      - 19
    iso-8601: 2010-02-19
    literal: 2010-02-19
    raw: 2010-02-19
  license: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
    License (CC-BY-NC)
  title: A patent conundrum
  type: article-newspaper
  URL: "https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/a-patent-conundrum/"
comments:
  hypothesis:
    theme: clean
date: 2010-02-19
description: Who does publicly-funded scientific innovation belong to?
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license:
  text: CC BY-NC 4.0
  type: creative-commons
  url: "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/"
listing-page: ../press.html
original-url: "https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/a-patent-conundrum/"
publication: Indian Express
title: A patent conundrum
title-block-categories: true
toc-title: Table of contents
---

# A patent conundrum

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How can we make public funding of science research accountable? That's
the question raised by the Protection and Utilisation of Public Funded
Intellectual Property (PUPFIP) Bill, currently with a Parliamentary
Standing Committee. The bill stresses the creation of intellectual
property rights (IPR) as a form of accountability --- inspired by the
American Bayh-Dole Act of 1980. IPR are monopoly rights granted by
governments as part of a social quid pro quo for the promotion of
creativity and innovation. Patents, for instance, prevent others from
making use of the protected invention for a period of 20 years. However,
the terms of this quid pro quo must naturally change if the invention
arises from research conducted using taxpayers' money. Additionally,
these patents cost a lot of public money to register and maintain, as
the government well knows: on average, Centre for Scientific and
Industrial Research (CSIR) spending on registering and maintaining
patents was more than ten times what it earns as royalties from those
patents. While government research is not driven solely by the profit
motive, the aim should not be to needlessly burn through taxpayers'
money either. The government (which funds more than three-fourths of all
R&D in India) should thus seek to encourage research and its
dissemination, and not to curtail it by forcefully asserting various
IPR. While we are bound to the patent system by international treaty
commitments, we can at least ensure that it does not work against the
interests of development.

In fact, the head of CSIR has gone on record stating that he does not
plan to charge royalties for the innovative solar-powered rickshaw that
CSIR scientists have patented. Furthermore, the Open Source Drug
Discovery project, that has got CSIR recognised as a pioneer in the
world of drug discovery, has notched up more than 2,000 contributors and
an international publication within a year of its launch, and is now
moving on to re-annotation of mycobacterium tuberculosis genome. Such
renunciation of royalties for the public good and models of open
collaboration will not be possible under the PUPFIP Bill as it stands,
since it severely restricts the freedom of researchers and academics to
speak to their peers in conferences and to publish papers, and mandates
patent protection of all publicly funded research.

The Bill, as presented before Parliament, also allows for exclusive
licensing of public funded IPRs to individual corporations (thus leading
to monopoly pricing) without providing any guidelines or safeguards to
uphold the interests of the public, which in India consists largely of
the poor. The very idea of public interest, which after all is the
barometer by which public funding is to be measured, seems to be present
nowhere except for the aims and objectives of the Bill. This must be
rectified if any bill on publicly funded research is to hold water.
Additionally, the emphasis in such a bill must not be on publicly funded
intellectual property, but on public funded research and development.
Legislation cannot be a panacea for the ills (both real and imagined) of
Indian science --- and a legislation focussed solely on IP even less so.
A legislation that inhibits scientists from sharing knowledge and does
not approach the matter from a public interest perspective can only
worsen the situation.

One of the best ways to induce accountability into the system is to
insist on open access publications that can be studied, learnt from, and
criticised by the researcher's peers as well as the public. This is also
a recommendation of the World Health Assembly's Global Strategy and Plan
of Action on Public Health, Innovation and Intellectual Property.
Patents alone cannot substitute for innovation, nor are they, especially
in today's fast-moving world, a good measure of the same. As Google's
senior vice-president put it recently, innovation and production of
value lies not so much in building walls, but in building bridges. We
cannot be following paradigms established 30 years ago in a completely
different Western context, and hope that Indian science will benefit
thereby. We must engage in a national dialogue on public access to
publicly funded research, and must not allow a bill drafted in secrecy,
and focussing solely on IP protection, to be passed in a roughshod
manner.

By recently convening a meeting on the problems with the Bill, the
departments of biotechnology and science and technology have taken the
concerns of several senior scientists seriously, and are now willing to
involve the public in discussion around the implications of the PUPFIP
Bill. This is a positive step, for which they must be lauded.

**The writer works at the Centre for Internet and Society, Bangalore**
