http://emergingtech.foe.org.au/geopiracy-patent-law-climate-change-and-geoengineering/

Geopiracy: Patent law, climate change, and geoengineering

Posted by Jeremy Admin on Jul 2, 2014 in Featured |

Patent law is a regime of intellectual property, which provides exclusive
rights regarding scientific inventions, which are novel, inventive, and
useful. There has been much debate over the limits of patentable subject
matter relating to emerging technologies. The Supreme Court of the US has
sought to rein in the expansive interpretation of patentability by lower
courts in a series of cases dealing with medical information (Prometheus),
finance (Bilski), and gene patents (Myriad). This has led to a
reinvigoration of the debate over the boundaries of patentable subject
matter. There has been controversy about the rise in patenting of
geoengineering – particularly by firms such as Intellectual Ventures.
Intellectual Ventures is a private company founded by Nathan Myhrvold and
Edward Jung of Microsoft, and later joined by Peter Detkin of Intel and
Gregory Gorder of Perkins Coie. The company’s motto is ‘inventors have the
power to change the world’. In 2009, Intellectual Ventures explained its
interest in the field of geoengineering. The company sought to normalise
the technology. Intellectual Ventures stressed that geoengineering should
be considered as a form of large-scale engineering: "Geoengineering"
describes how the earth’s systems can be influenced by engineering
solutions. There are many historic examples of how humans have used
technology to change geological systems. From using fire to drive game to
building irrigation for agriculture, seeding clouds during droughts,
reversing the Chicago River to building the Hoover dam, the term can
encompass all sorts of ideas. Today, options discussed often include
large-scale engineering of the environment in order to combat or counteract
the adverse effects of human-induced changes in the atmosphere and
climate." Intellectual Ventures has made significant investments in
geoengineering patents. The company is coy about whether it plans to profit
from these patents. Intellectual Ventures observes: ‘Intellectual Ventures
invents new technology as its main business, but we do not expect or intend
that our climate technology inventions will make money.’ Intellectual
Ventures maintains that its program is a humanitarian one. However, the
company has its detractors. In 2011,
This American Life noted that Intellectual Ventures had been subjected to
fierce criticism: "There’s an influential blog in Silicon Valley called
TechDirt that regularly refers to Intellectual Ventures as a patent troll.
Another blog, IP Watchdog, called Intellectual Ventures "patent troll
public enemy #1." And the Wall Street Journal’s law blog had an article
about Intellectual Ventures titled "Innovative Invention Company Or Giant
Patent Troll?" The radio show contended that Intellectual Ventures used a
corporate web of companies, and a hoard of patents, to pressure companies
to either submit to patent licence fees or litigation. For his part, Nathan
Myhrvold denied the accusation: ‘Well, that’s a term that has been used by
people to mean someone they don’t like, who has patents. I think you would
find almost anyone who stands up for their patent rights has been called a
patent troll.’ Intellectual Ventures argues that it provides a licensing
system to enable access to key inventions. Nonetheless, there has been
empirical evidence – particularly from Professor Colleen Chien – that
strategic litigation by patent assertion entities is a widespread problem,
particularly in the US. In 2013, President Barack Obama and the White House
announced the introduction of a package of reforms to address the issue of
‘patent trolls’. The Obama administration promised to take executive and
legislative action to discourage strategic litigation by patent owners. The
White House discussed the problem of patent trolls: "Innovators continue to
face challenges from Patent Assertion Entities (PAEs), companies that, in
the President’s words "don’t actually produce anything themselves," and
instead develop a business model "to essentially leverage and hijack
somebody else’s idea and see if they can extort some money out of them."
The White House emphasised: ‘Stopping this drain on the American economy
will require swift legislative action, and we are encouraged by the
attention the issue is receiving in recent weeks.’ The Obama Administration
stressed: ‘We stand ready to work with Congress on these issues crucial to
our economy, American jobs, and innovation’. The White House commented:
‘While no single law or policy can address all these issues, much can and
should be done to increase clarity and level the playing field for
innovators.’ However, a legislative effort to address patent trolls has
stalled in the United States Senate. In his book, Earth Masters: Playing
God with the Climate, Clive Hamilton discusses the rise in the patenting of
climate engineering. He comments that ‘regulation moves more slowly than
commerce and in recent years there has been a flurry of broad patents taken
out over methods to engineer the climate.’ He observes that ‘some of them
are so broad that, if enforceable, they would place fertilisation of the
oceans in the hands of one man.’ Hamilton was alarmed by studies of patent
thickets in respect of geoengineering: ‘In 2010 Shobita Parthasarathy and
co-authors noted a sharp increase in geoengineering patents in recent years
and warned that, as in the case of biotechnology, the patents owned by
private companies and individuals are on track to become the de facto form
of governance of geoengineering’. Hamilton warned: ‘We are approaching a
situation in which international efforts to protect humanity from climate
catastrophe could depend on whether or not one company wants to sell its
intellectual property.’ In his landmark book on climate change and
philosophy, Stephen M. Gardiner considered the ethics of geoengineering. He
noted that ‘geoengineering is a relatively new and underexplored topic’
both in terms of the science and the ethics. Gardiner is particularly
interested in the justification that geoengineering is a ‘lesser evil’
required in order to ‘arm the future’: ‘We should be wary of arguments from
emergency; clearly they are open to manipulation’. Furthermore, Gardiner
provides a critique of the ‘arm the future’ rationale provided for pursuing
geoengineering, suggesting that it is less straightforward and decisive
than it is usually taken to be. He suggests that issues – such as
liability, compensation, political legitimacy, and lingering inertia –
raise the ethical stakes in geoengineering policy. The philosopher
emphasises the need for caution. Some commentators have argued for bans or
moratoria regarding specific geoengineering technologies. Harvard
University Professor, David Keith, has contended that the US Federal
Government could ban patents in the field of solar radiation. He observed:
‘This is technology that allows any country to affect the whole climate in
gigantic ways, which has literally potential to lead to wars’. Keith
maintained: ‘It has this sort of giant and frightening leverage.’ He
commented: ‘We think it’s very dangerous for these solar radiation
technologies, it’s dangerous to have it be privatized.’ He maintained: ‘The
core technologies need to be public domain.’ The ETC Group has engaged in
larger work on patent law and geoengineering – raising concerns about what
they term ‘geopiracy’. The organisation states: ‘As if restructuring the
climate isn’t controversial enough, a handful of geoengineers are
privatizing the means to do so by claiming patent rights over
geoengineering techniques.’ The ETC Group noted that there were divisions
in international negotiations over the policy settings in respect of
intellectual property and climate change: ‘The politics of patents has
always been a divisive issue when it surfaces in different international
fora’. The ETC Group argues that ‘the challenge of addressing climate
change highlights the need for the sound and timely evaluation of new
technologies.’ The Canadian writer Naomi Klein also raises concerns about
geoengineering. She notes that the technology may be appealing to some:
‘Geoengineering offers the tantalizing promise of a climate change fix that
would allow us to continue our resource-exhausting way of life,
indefinitely.’ Klein is concerned about the lack of informed consent for
geoengineering: ‘The truth is that geoengineering is itself a rogue
proposition.’ Klein noted: ‘While the United Nations’ climate negotiations
proceed from the premise that countries must agree to a joint response to
an inherently communal problem, geoengineering raises a very different
prospect’. She is concerned that particular countries or companies could
engage in geoengineering without proper consent or authorisation from
others: ‘For well under a billion dollars, a "coalition of the willing," a
single country or even a wealthy individual could decide to take the
climate into its own hands.’ In his 2013 book, The Future, Al Gore is
sceptical of geoengineering. He warns of the psychological problem of
‘single-action bias’, an ingrained preference for single solutions, even
for complex problems. Gore suggests that ‘this common flaw in our way of
thinking helps to explain the otherwise inexplicable support for a number
of completely bizarre proposals that are collectively known as
geoengineering.’ He fears that a number of geoengineering proposals involve
reckless risks to the environment and humanity. Gore reflects that ‘our way
of communicating about global challenges and debating reasonable solutions
has been subjected to an unhealthy degree of distortion and control by
wealthy corporate interests who are themselves desperate to prevent serious
consideration of reducing global warming pollution.’ He warns: ‘If we
continue to delay the launching of a serious multipronged global effort to
reduce the emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse gas pollution, we will
find ourselves pushed toward increasingly desperate measures to mitigate
the growing impacts of global warming.’

Dr Matthew Rimmer is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow, working
on Intellectual Property and Climate Change. He is an associate professor
at the ANU College of Law, and an associate director of the Australian
Centre for Intellectual Property in Agriculture.

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