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UC Berkeley’s Research Partnerships

UC Berkeley’s Research Partnerships. UK-US Higher Education Forum . December 1-2, 2011 London. University of California, Berkeley Associate Vice Chancellor for Research Robert Price. Examples: Three different partnership models. Socially Responsible Licensing Energy Bioscience Institute

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UC Berkeley’s Research Partnerships

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  1. UC Berkeley’s Research Partnerships UK-US Higher Education Forum. December 1-2, 2011 London University of California, Berkeley Associate Vice Chancellor for Research Robert Price

  2. Examples: Three different partnership models • Socially Responsible Licensing • Energy Bioscience Institute • BEARS Many research collaborations/partnerships: No single Model

  3. Socially Responsible Licensing Program Program begun in 2003 with Four Core Goals • increase external support for Berkeley research • support start-up company development by Berkeley researchers • maximize the societal benefit of Berkeley’s discoveries • affordable access in low income countries to products derived from Berkeley discoveries

  4. (PDP) Product Development Partnership for Malaria Therapies Begun in 2004 Drug distributed in 2012 UC Berkeley Keasling Lab $8M Royalty free license Royalty free license $12M Funder $22.6M Technology/synthetic anti-malarial drug (artemisinin) Synthetic Biology startup company Institute for One World Health Not for Profit sub-license (2009) Big Pharma

  5. University is one contributor among many UC Berkeley Government International Agencies Funding agency Foundations Start-ups Industry NGOs Partnerships forged by Industrial Alliance office (IAO) and Each partner must benefit while sacrificing something

  6. Each partner trades sacrifices for benefits Early stage funding from philanthropy Profits from licensed technology in biofuels, fragrances, flavors, etc. Regulatory fast track for drug development Low cost to Developing World Research funding Public service Benefit Scale Regulation Basic Research Applied Research Manufacturing Distribution Foregoes royalties on sales in low-income countries No profit from sales of anti-malarial drug Sacrifices No Profit from anti-malarial drug Sacrifices Instead of a “relay race” a single donor makes one grant to fund basic research, translational research, clinical & regulatory activities No gaps (time, expertise, additional transactions) between stages

  7. Example #2 Applying bioscience to the global energy challenge Mission: transportation fuel from cellulose Bench to fuel tank

  8. Ten Years $500 Million, from BP Public-Private Partnership • Two Research Universities (UC Berkeley, Univ. of Illinois, Champagne/Urbana • A National Laboratory (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) • A global energy company (BP) Timeline • October 2006-- RFP to 5 potential hosts • February 1, 2007-- award made to Berkeley, Illinois, and LBNL • Spring – Fall 2007-- contract negotiations • November 14, 2007-- contract formally signed, operations begin

  9. Berkeley-BP Partnership Agreement: Unusual Features • Industry scientist (BP) work in labs on University campus • Co-located with University researchers • An Open Component and a Proprietary Component • Open Component: academic research in fundamental biosciences; all results area publishable • Proprietary Component: private, confidential research; results are sole property of BP. • Open and Proprietary components located in adjacent building space • Open component– all collaborators can participate, including BP employees (scientists, consultants) • Proprietary component– space leased from University; controlled cardkey access to BP employees only. Biomass Depoloymerization

  10. Berkeley-BP Partnership Agreement: Unusual Features Operating principle with respect to Intellectual Property– “yours-mine-ours” • “Yours” - inventions made solely by BP personnel in leased space • “Mine” - inventions made solely by UCB, UIUC or LBNL personnel in their own space • “Ours” - inventions made by at least one inventor for BP and at least one member of UCB, UIUC or LBNL Miscanthus Growth over a Single Growing Season Illinois

  11. Licensing provisions For inventions owned by UCB, UIUC and/or LBNL, or jointly with BP • EXCLUSIVE • BP has first right to negotiate exclusive license to sole or joint inventions. • pre-negotiated capped fees ($100K per year + patent costs) • “Bonanza clause” in case of extraordinary commercial success • BP will diligently pursue commercialization NON-EXCLUSIVE BP has access to non-exclusive, royalty free (NERF) license in BP’s area of interest (fuels), providing: BP will diligently pursue commercialization of licensed technology BP will underwrite the patent costs

  12. Background IP • BP Receives a Royalty Free Nonexclusive license to BIP • •If inventors received funding from BP through EBI • If available when foreground IP is licensed • •solely to the extent necessary • •solely to put into practice licensed, project IP • If an inventor has NOT received BP funding • License requires inventors consent • Up to $20K per year for one patent • Up to $50K per year for a bundle (if bundle necessary to practice one invention)

  13. EBI (UIUC) Deputy Director EBI (BP) Assoc. Director EBI (UCB) Director 6 Program Leaders EBI governance and oversight Governance Board Advisory Board UCB/UIUC/LBNL - 4 representatives BP - 4 representatives Executive Committee Strategic Science Advisors Open Research Programs Proprietary Research Programs 13

  14. Research Program • Six broad subject matter areas defined in Agreement: e.g., feedstocks, biomass deconstruction/depolymerization, biofuels production, Environmental, social and economic dimensions. • Annual Open Call for proposals (Open Component) • peer reviewed • Executive Committee makes funding decisions • Governance Board accepts or declines the full slate of proposals . . . cannot cherry pick. • Program Scale • 129 PIs; 126 post-docs, 133 graduate students • 60 Inventions disclosures and 20 patents to date • 60 research projects and programs supported to date • 382 journal publications and 400 presentations or posters

  15. Example #3 Berkeley Education Alliance for Research in Singapore (BEARS) November 17, 2011 A Company Limited by Guarantee in Singapore Owned and Managed by the University of California

  16. BEARS: A Center for Climate and Energy Research • Research Programs • Building Efficiency and Sustainability in the Tropics • Photovoltaics and photoelectrochemical cells • Research Participants • Investigators from UCB, LBNL, NUS, and NTU • Funding • Grant of $95M from Singapore government’s National Research Foundation • $75M for research in Singapore • $20M for research in Berkeley • Location • Downtown Singapore • In NRF’s new Campus for Research Excellence and Technological Enterprise (CREATE) • Rent Free

  17. Unusual Features • BEARS is a limited Liability Corporation (LLC) • Located in Singapore • Owned and Managed by Berkeley • Receives and Distributes the $95M in NRF funds • Singapore residency requirement for Berkeley researchers • Director, tenured Berkeley faculty member, resident in Singapore • At least 6 BerkeleyfacultyPIs must spend one year in aggregate (over 5 years) in Singapore • one stay of at least 6 months, shorter stays of at least 4 weeks. • Intellectual Property • Ownership principle: yours, mine, joint • All BEARS sponsored IP, whomever the owner, managed by Singapore Technology Licencing Office (TLO)

  18. Research Programs (Singapore and Berkeley) Director/CEO Berkeley Faculty Member Based in Singapore Buildings Program Lead: UCB Photovoltaics Program Lead: UCB Governance Governing Board 8 Members 4 NRF/4UCB UCB College of Engineering (Sponsor of BEARS) Executive Director/COO Based in Singapore HQ Staff Based in Singapore Governing Board (by 2/3rd majority): • Appoints Director tin collaboration with UCB COE • Provides oversight for BEARS operations • Approves disbursement of grant funds • Sets priorities and direction for BEARS

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