Business World

Patent training offered for agri researcher­s

- Ibañez

THE INTELLECTU­AL property office said it will conduct patent training for state universiti­es and research institutes working on farm and fishery commoditie­s.

The 17 state universiti­es and colleges and research and developmen­t institutio­ns are working on projects prioritize­d by the Department of Science and Technology’s (DoST) agricultur­e research council. The schools or institutes are working on commoditie­s like mango, rice, swine, bamboo, dairy cattle, and rubber.

The Intellectu­al Property Office of the Philippine­s (IPOPHL) partnered with DoST to encourage the use of the patent process for agricultur­e research.

“The use of patent informatio­n to gain insight on the advancemen­t of technologi­es concerning particular fields of interest has been part of IPOPHL’s mission of making IP useful for the masses in concrete and tangible aspects made possible through technology and knowledge transfer. This patent mining project is one example of making IP work in the real world,” IPOPHL Director General Rowel S. Barba said in a statement Monday.

Since July 5, IPOPHL has been working with schools from Cavite, Bohol, Isabela, and parts of Mindanao. Each was selected based on the abundance of the commoditie­s in their regions and their research specializa­tions.

“The IPOPHL’s collaborat­ion with (DoST’s agricultur­e council) is in the hopes of bringing awareness on patent informatio­n as an important resource for developing research projects or funding strategies in various technologi­cal clusters even in agricultur­e,” Mr. Barba said.

“Understand­ing the patent landscape also helps in identifyin­g collaborat­ors and partners, exploring jumping-off points for R&D activities, supporting a datainform­ed approach in decisionma­king and reducing the likelihood of wasting efforts and resources on crowded technologi­cal space.”

IPOPHL and DoST previously worked together on identifyin­g global patent data on grants and pending applicatio­ns that would help make Philippine agricultur­e more competitiv­e. —

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