95-4611. Acquisition Regulation; Updating of Patent Regulations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 41 (Thursday, March 2, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 11812-11825]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-4611]
    
    
    
    
    [[Page 11811]]
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part IV
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Energy
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    48 CFR Parts 927, 952 and 970
    
    
    
    Acquisition Regulation; Updating of Patent Regulations; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 41 / Thursday, March 2, 1995 / Rules 
    and Regulations 
    [[Page 11812]] 
    
    DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
    
    48 CFR Parts 927, 952 and 970
    
    RIN 1991-AA23
    
    
    Acquisition Regulation; Updating of Patent Regulations
    
    AGENCY: Department of Energy (DOE).
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The Department today amends the Department of Energy 
    Acquisition Regulation (DEAR) to base the DOE patent regulations on the 
    Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) patent regulations at Subpart 27.2 
    and the associated FAR patent clauses at 52.227 to the extent that the 
    FAR coverage is consistent with the DOE statutory patent requirements.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: April 3, 1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    
    Robert M. Webb, Procurement Policy Division (PR-121), U.S. Department 
    of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, D.C. 20585, (202) 
    586-8264
    Sue Palk, Office of the Assistant General Counsel for Intellectual 
    Property (GC-42), U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, 
    SW., Washington, D.C. 20585, (202) 586-2802
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
        A. Discussion
        B. Disposition of comments
    II. Procedural Requirements
        A. Regulatory Review
        B. Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
        C. Review Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
        D. Review Under the National Environmental Policy Act
        E. Review Under Executive Order 12612
        F. Review Under Executive Order 12778
    
    I. Background
    
    A. Discussion
    
        The proposed rule was published on March 29, 1994, at 59 FR 14593 
    (1994). It was intended to amend the Department of Energy Acquisition 
    Regulation to reflect the changes to DOE's statutory patent policy, 
    arising out of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 
    2011 et seq., and the Federal Non-Nuclear Energy Research and 
    Development Act, 42 U.S.C. 5901 et seq., necessitated by the Bayh-Dole 
    Act of 1980 and the Trademark Clarification Act of 1984. The rule is 
    based on patent provisions at FAR 27.3 and FAR 52.227, varying to the 
    extent necessary to fulfill DOE statutory and programmatic duties.
        Six sets of comments were received. Of those one was from a private 
    citizen, one was from a private organization, and four were from 
    current DOE management and operating contractor organizations.
    
    B. Disposition of Comments
    
        Two commenters question the relationship of this rulemaking to 
    DOE's contract reform initiative. This rulemaking, as stated in the 
    preamble to the proposed rule is intended to update the DOE coverage of 
    patent rights and to bring DOE's regulations on the subject more in 
    line with the provisions of the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR). 
    DOE believes this rulemaking is overdue and must be carried to 
    completion. Any final developments of the Contract Reform Initiative 
    that will affect patent rights will be reflected in a subsequent 
    rulemaking.
        One commenter questions the Department's ability to ``issue 
    independent technical data clauses which are deviations from those 
    clauses published in the FAR.'' This rulemaking is directed to DOE's 
    patent regulations, not its technical data regulations. The special 
    status for DOE's patent coverage is statutory and was discussed in 
    detail in the preamble to the proposed rule for this rulemaking. No 
    change has been made.
        The same commenter has questioned the inclusion of 
    ``demonstration'' with research and development in establishing the 
    scope of this regulation, while another has requested that the term be 
    defined to distinguish the term from ``research and development'' to 
    clarify the different rights that may accrue. As explained in the 
    proposed rule, ``research, development, and demonstration'' is the 
    statutory scope for the Department's patent policy and has been 
    incorporated into this rulemaking. The second commenter requested a 
    definition of ``demonstration'' predicated upon an assumption that 
    different rights may accrue. This is not the case. We believe that the 
    term ``demonstration,'' particularly in light of its statutory basis, 
    to be sufficiently clear. Therefore, neither change has been made.
        One commenter suggests that the regulations at 927.300 and 927.302 
    refer to financial assistance transactions. The DEAR controls the award 
    and administration in DOE of procurement contracts, the purposes of 
    which are described in Public Law 95-224. It does not control the award 
    or administration of either grants or cooperative agreements, 
    assistance transactions, as the purposes of those terms are described 
    in the same public law. For the Department of Energy, the regulations 
    governing assistance transactions are contained at 10 CFR part 600. For 
    this reason, we have made not made the suggested change. The 
    regulations governing patents for assistance instruments will be the 
    subject of a separate rulemaking.
        A commenter noted that at the new 927.300 the reference to the 
    regulations that control DOE's granting of waivers of its ownership of 
    inventions should be corrected to reflect that the location and content 
    of those is not being affected by this rulemaking and will continue to 
    exist at 41 CFR 9-9.1 of the old Department of Energy Procurement 
    Regulations (DOE PR) until they are made the subject of their own 
    rulemaking. A change has been made to the first sentence of 927.300(b). 
    That same commenter suggests that the restatement of DOE policy 
    concerning the granting of waivers at 927.300(b) and (c) be deleted. We 
    believe those provisions are descriptive of the policy and yet make it 
    clear that the controlling regulations are located elsewhere. 
    Therefore, we have retained those provisions, modified as described 
    above. We deleted the second sentence of 927.300(a) as unnecessary.
        One commenter suggests that ``Government'' be substituted for 
    ``DOE'' in the first sentence of 927.302(a). We have chosen to make a 
    change using the phrase ``the United States, as represented by DOE,''.
        The same commenter states that the statement of the authorities of 
    the Assistant General Counsel for Technology Transfer and Intellectual 
    Property that were contained at 9-9.109-3(d) of the DOE PR should be 
    retained. We agree and have added them at 927.302(d).
        Another commenter requests the addition of the phrase ``or is 
    unable to meet these market demands within a reasonable time'' be added 
    to the description of circumstances at 927.302(b) in which DOE would 
    exercise its rights to require licensing of background patents to third 
    parties on reasonable terms and conditions. The statement at 927.302(b) 
    is merely descriptive, and, in fact, describes the substantial 
    considerations in the Government's application for licensing of third 
    parties. The terms of paragraph (k) of the clause at 952.227-13 
    control, and provide the contractor the opportunity to demonstrate to 
    the Department's satisfaction that either the current market situation 
    is satisfactory or can be made so in a reasonable time. We have not 
    made a change, believing that the current sentence is descriptive. Any 
    additional discussion would [[Page 11813]] require additional 
    clarification, adding to the complexity of a provision that is merely 
    descriptive, not regulatory.
        A commenter has suggested revision of the third sentence of 
    927.302(c) to correct ambiguities in the listing of types of contracts 
    for which the Government's rights in background patents may not be 
    appropriate. We have made changes to the sentence that accomplish the 
    intended purpose.
        One commenter has noted that the clause at FAR 52.227-12, 
    appropriately modified may suffice as a patent rights clause in a 
    contract for which DOE has granted an advance waiver of its title. That 
    may be the case. We have modified section 927.303(b) to reflect that 
    possibility while maintaining the prohibition against the use of the 
    clause generally.
        One commenter objects to the inclusion at 952.227-9 of the Refund 
    of Royalties clause in place of a clause of the same name in the FAR. 
    The commenter suggests the use of a supplemental provision and, along 
    with a second commenter, questions the authority of DOE to publish this 
    clause where there is already a FAR provision. As explained in the 
    preamble to the proposed rule, this clause is the FAR clause at 52.227-
    9 with the addition of sentences to assure the recognition of royalties 
    deriving from technical data and copyrighted material and a disclaimer. 
    The purpose of this clause and the FAR clause upon which it is based is 
    to prevent the Government's paying royalties relating to a form of 
    intellectual property to which it already has a license, perhaps 
    royalty free. We have acted to expand the FAR provision to include all 
    forms of intellectual property and to assure a continuing right to 
    challenge the validity of intellectual property giving rise to the 
    royalty. We believe these concerns to be of significant importance to 
    DOE with its expansive technological mission. No entity is hurt by the 
    minor changes to the FAR clause, except a firm that may today be in a 
    position to acquire royalties from a Government contractor for use of 
    technical data or copyrighted material to which the Government already 
    has a license. We have retained the clause as it is in the proposed 
    rule.
        The second commenter says that the clause ``is unclear on whether 
    costs paid for technical assistance and transfer of know how are 
    subject to repayment when the information transferred is not protected 
    by a valid patent, copyright, or otherwise qualifies for intellectual 
    property protections.'' We disagree. This clause in either of its forms 
    is premised upon the payment of what is commonly recognized as a 
    royalty or license fee. In order for a royalty to be paid the payee 
    must recognize a proprietary right in the property. If no such basis 
    exists, a royalty would not be paid. The types of costs would be 
    subject to the clause only to the extent that they are part of a 
    royalty agreement and could be classified as a royalty. We have made no 
    change.
        We have deleted the phrase ``in the performance of work'' from the 
    definition of ``subject invention'' as it appears in the clause at 
    952.227-13 to conform more closely to the statutory language. We have 
    altered the definition of ``patent counsel'' in that clause to mean the 
    patent counsel responsible for patent administration under the specific 
    contract, rather than Headquarters Patent Counsel.
        One commenter objects to the use of the word ``consultation'' in 
    paragraph (b)(2) of the clause at 952.227-13 expressing the obligations 
    of an employee prior to that employee's asserting an interest in a 
    subject invention. The previous DOE clause allowed an employee-inventor 
    to request greater rights after acquiring the authorization of the 
    contractor-employer. Since the promulgation of the previous DOE clause, 
    Bayh-Dole was enacted, offering this right to employee-inventors upon 
    consultation with their small business or nonprofit employers. The FAR 
    in the clause at 52.227-13 for use with large, profit-making companies 
    has reflected this change.
        The proposed rule language was premised upon the FAR language. 
    Bayh-Dole and the FAR reflect an interest in maximizing the 
    commercialization of inventions under Government contracts in these 
    circumstances in which the contractor-employer has chosen not to pursue 
    a request for greater rights in a subject invention. We can identify no 
    DOE interest that demands that the employee-inventor acquire the 
    permission of his employer. The contractor-employer can control this 
    situation by fashioning an employment agreement to protect its 
    interest. Such an agreement, not this clause, will control what form 
    the employee-inventor's ``consultation'' takes. We have made no change.
        One commenter has suggested that paragraph (e)(2) of the clause at 
    952.227-13 include a recognition of a statutory premise ``that a 
    reported invention will be deemed to have been made in the manner 
    specified in Section (a) (1) and (2) of 42 U.S.C. 5908 unless the 
    contractor contends in writing when the invention is reported that it 
    was not so made.'' We agree and have made the change.
        A commenter opposes the Government's acquisition of rights in 
    background patents in paragraph (k) of the clause at 952.227-13(k) and 
    as described at 927.302(b), stating that ``it could be argued that the 
    DOE is vesting itself with the power to take the property of others 
    without paying valid compensation.'' The commenter suggests that ``[i]f 
    the DOE requires such rights, it can negotiate to purchase them like 
    any contracting party, or (sic) in the alternative, it may utilize its 
    rights under FAR 52.227-1 ``Authorization and Consent.'' We disagree. 
    First, the inclusion of paragraph (k) represents the acquisition of an 
    inchoate right which goes to the heart of the involvement of public 
    funds in the particular project at a time in which the parties are at 
    an equal bargaining position. These rights provide DOE only a 
    nonexclusive and royalty free license ``for the purposes of practicing 
    a subject of this contract by or for the Government in research, 
    development, and demonstration work only.'' Furthermore, DOE can demand 
    that the contractor license third parties to its background patents 
    only under a limited set of circumstances ``on terms that are 
    reasonable under the circumstances.'' Should, in fact, the contractor 
    be put in a monopolistic position in the market place as a result of 
    the research, development, or demonstration of the contract with DOE 
    and should that contractor choose not to meet market demand, DOE would 
    be in a compromised bargaining position. Without the rights provided 
    for in paragraph (k), DOE or any third party would have to pay dearly 
    to acquire these background rights even though Federal taxpayer funds 
    would have played a meaningful part in the contractor's market 
    position. We have made no change.
        Additionally, we have reviewed the proposed clause at 952.227-13 
    after having reflected the comments received and have made technical 
    changes necessary to accurately reflect DOE's statutory patent policy 
    and to enhance the smooth operation of the clause. We believe that the 
    only changes of any significance, both occurring in the definition of 
    ``subject invention,'' are required by DOE's statute, i.e., adding the 
    phrase ``in the course of or'' before ``under this contract'' and 
    deleting the ``provided'' clause that runs to the end of that 
    definition. The first of these causes that definition to accurately 
    reflect the statutory scope, and the second is necessary to reflect the 
    breadth of that statutory scope.
        We have added a definition of Patent Counsel and substituted that 
    office for the Secretary of Energy where receipt of 
    [[Page 11814]] communication occurs in the text of the clause. We have 
    also added a definition of DOE patent waiver regulations and used that 
    term where appropriate in the text of the clause. We deleted the 
    definition of the Head of contracting agency and used Secretary of 
    Energy where appropriate throughout the clause.
        In several places in the clause the proposed clause used the word 
    ``retain'' in the context of the greater rights determination. We have 
    used more specific terms depending upon the context to reflect the 
    contractor's right to ``request'' greater rights or the Department's 
    having ``granted'' the contractor greater rights.
        In the third sentence of paragraph (b)(2)(i), we have substituted a 
    definite condition for the application of the minimum rights flowing to 
    the Government under paragraph (c) upon its granting a request for 
    waiver in place of ``normally.''
        At paragraph (b)(2)(ii) we have substituted a time certain, two 
    months after filing the patent application, rather than ``upon 
    request'' for the contractor's providing identifying information 
    relating to the application. We have also edited that subparagraph to 
    grammatically reflect the separate duties with regard to a patent 
    application and issuance of the patent. In order to assure that a 
    contractor's patent application not expire for failure to prosecute we 
    have added new subparagraph (b)(2)(iii) requiring notice by the 
    contractor should it decide not to prosecute. The subparagraph (iii) of 
    the proposed rule has been redesignated as subparagraph (iv).
        We have substituted the term ``subparagraphs(c)(1)'' for 
    ``subdivisions'' in subparagraph (c)(1)(iii). The former reference 
    added unnecessarily to the opportunity for misinterpretation.
        At paragraph (d)(4)(vi) we have corrected a reference for the 
    duration of the time period for DOE's not publishing invention 
    disclosures relating to an application for foreign patent rights by 
    providing for that time period to be determined by the DOE patent 
    counsel. At subparagraph (d)(4)(vii), we have corrected a mistaken 
    reference in the first sentence with the phrase ``in a timely manner.'' 
    We have added as the penultimate sentence of paragraph (e)(2) a 
    description of the report called for. At paragraph (e)(5) we have 
    corrected a reference that is in error in the FAR clause, i.e, ``FAR 
    27.302(j)'' in place of ``FAR 27.302(i).''
        Finally, with regard to the clause, at paragraph (g)(3), we have 
    substituted the obligation of acquiring an affirmative patent clearance 
    before final payment in lieu of ``past due confirmatory instruments.''
        A commenter questions the provision at 970.2702(b) that describes 
    the right of management and operating contractors, not small businesses 
    or nonprofit entities, to request advance waivers and waivers in 
    identified inventions. He suggests that this premise makes this a 
    ``significant regulatory action.'' We disagree. These rights have 
    existed throughout the history of DOE's statutory patent policy. We 
    have made an attendant change in the last sentence of this subsection 
    substituting ``42 U.S.C. 5908'' for ``927.300.''
        The same commenter has suggested the insertion of the word 
    ``nonprofit'' in the first sentence of 970.2702(e) describing Bayh-Dole 
    rights of DOE management and operating contractors. We have made the 
    change.
        Two commenters question the provisions of 970.2703 and the 
    provisions of paragraph (m) of the clause at 970.5204-XX, relating to 
    the transfer of title and reservation of income from licensing of 
    subject inventions for the benefit of the laboratory, rather than the 
    contractor. Both note that Bayh-Dole vests title in the nonprofit or 
    educational entities and suggest that the provisions do not comply with 
    the law where DOE employs such an entity to manage and operate one of 
    its facilities. This provision merely reflects the reality of 
    provisions of DOE's management and operating contracts in the interplay 
    between patent provisions and technology transfer. That reality takes 
    into account the special position of DOE's management and operating 
    contractors as was recognized in Bayh-Dole. We have made no change at 
    either place.
        One commenter questions 970.2795(c), saying that it should be 
    revised ``to indicate that the limitations on the use of contractor 
    employees only apply to those contractor employees assigned to, and 
    working at the DOE facility.'' This provision verbatim existed before 
    this rulemaking at 970.2701(d). An underlying premise of DOE's 
    management and operating contracts is that the organization is 
    independent of its corporate body. The workforce is dedicated to the 
    work and is located at the DOE facility. This provision is written to 
    that reality, and must remain that way to prevent any unintended 
    restriction on its application. No change has been made.
    
    II. Procedural Requirements
    
    A. Regulatory Review
    
        Today's regulatory action has been determined not to be a 
    ``significant regulatory action'' under Executive Order 12866, 
    ``Regulatory Planning and Review,'' (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993). 
    Accordingly, today's action was not subject to review under the 
    Executive Order by the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs.
    
    B. Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        This final rule was reviewed under the Regulatory Flexibility Act 
    of 1980, Public Law 96-354, which requires preparation of a regulatory 
    flexibility analysis for any rule which is likely to have significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. DOE 
    certifies that this rule will not have a significant economic impact on 
    a substantial number of small entities and, therefore, no regulatory 
    flexibility analysis has been prepared.
    
    C. Review Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        No new information collection or recordkeeping requirements are 
    imposed by this final rulemaking. Accordingly, no OMB clearance is 
    required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et 
    seq.).
    
    D. Review Under NEPA
    
        The DOE has concluded that promulgation of this rule would not 
    represent a major Federal action having significant impact on the human 
    environment under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969 
    (42 U.S.C. 4321, 4331-4335, 4341-4347 (1976)), the Council on 
    Environmental Quality regulations (40 CFR Parts 1500-1508), or the DOE 
    guidelines (10 CFR Part 1021), and, therefore, does not require an 
    environmental impact statement or an environmental assessment pursuant 
    to NEPA.
    
    E. Review Under Executive Order 12612
    
        Executive Order 12612, 52 FR 41685 (October 30, 1987), requires 
    that regulations, rules, legislation, and any other policy actions be 
    reviewed for any substantial direct effects on States, on the 
    relationship between the national Government and the States, and in the 
    distribution of power and responsibilities among various levels of 
    Government. If there are sufficient substantial direct effects, then 
    the Executive Order requires preparation of a federalism assessment to 
    be used in all [[Page 11815]] decisions involved in promulgating and 
    implementing a policy action.
        Today's final rule will revise certain policy and procedural 
    requirements. However, DOE has determined that none of the revisions 
    will have a substantial direct effect on the institutional interests or 
    traditional functions of States.
    
    F. Review Under Executive Order 12778
    
        Section 2 of Executive Order 12778 instructs each agency to adhere 
    to certain requirements in promulgating new regulations and reviewing 
    existing regulations. These requirements, set forth in sections 2(a) 
    and (b)(2), include eliminating drafting errors and needless ambiguity, 
    drafting the regulations to minimize litigation, providing clear and 
    certain legal standards for affected conduct, and promoting 
    simplification and burden reduction. Agencies are also instructed to 
    make every reasonable effort to ensure that the regulation: Specifies 
    clearly any preemptive effect, effect on existing Federal law or 
    regulation, and retroactive effect; describes any administrative 
    proceedings to be available prior to judicial review and any provisions 
    for the exhaustion of such administrative proceedings; and defines key 
    terms. This final rule will have no preemptive effect, will not have 
    any effect on existing Federal laws, and will only clarify the existing 
    regulations on this subject. The revised clauses will apply only to 
    contracts which would be awarded after the effective date of the final 
    rule, and, thus, have no retroactive effect. Therefore, DOE certifies 
    that this final rule meets the requirements of sections 2 (a) and (b) 
    of Executive Order 12778.
    
    List of Subjects in 48 CFR Parts 927, 952, 970
    
        Government procurement, Patents.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, Chapter 9 of Title 48 of 
    the Code of Federal Regulations is amended as set forth below.
    
        Issued in Washington, D.C., on February 16, 1995.
    Richard H. Hopf,
    Deputy Assistant Secretary for Procurement and Assistance Management.
    
    PART 927--PATENTS, DATA, AND COPYRIGHTS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 927 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sec. 644 of the Department of Energy Organization 
    Act, Pub. L. 95-91 (42 U.S.C. 7254); Sec. 148 of the Atomic Energy 
    Act of 1954, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2168); Federal Nonnuclear Energy 
    Research and Development Act of 1974, sec. 9 (42 U.S.C. 5908); 
    Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, sec. 152 (42 U.S.C. 2182); 
    Department of Energy National Security and Military Applications of 
    Nuclear Energy Authorization Act of 1987, as amended, sec. 3131(a) 
    (42 U.S.C. 7261a.)
    
        2. Subpart 927.2 is added to read as follows:
    
    Subpart 927.2--Patents
    
    Sec.
    927.200  Scope of subpart.
    927.201  Authorization and consent.
    927.201-1  General.
    927.206  Refund of royalties.
    927.206-1  General.
    927.206-2  Clause for refund of royalties.
    927.207  Classified contracts.
    927.207-1  General.
    
    Subpart 927.2--Patents
    
    
    927.200  Scope of subpart.
    
        When consulting 48 CFR part 27, subpart 27.2 of the FAR, consider 
    ``research, development, and demonstration'' to replace the phrase 
    ``research and development'' or ``R&D,'' for the purposes of DOE 
    actions.
    
    
    927.201  Authorization and consent.
    
    
    927.201-1  General.
    
        In certain contracting situations, such as those involving 
    research, development, or demonstration projects, consideration should 
    be given to the impact of third party-owned patents covering technology 
    that may be incorporated in the project which patents may ultimately 
    affect widespread commercial use of the project results. In such 
    situations, Patent Counsel shall be consulted to determine what 
    modifications, if any, are to be made to the utilization of the 
    Authorization and Consent and Patent Indemnity provisions or what other 
    action might be deemed appropriate.
    
    
    927.206  Refund of royalties.
    
    
    927.206-1  General.
    
        The clause at 952.227-9, Refund of Royalties, obligates the 
    contractor to inform DOE of the payment of royalties pertaining to the 
    use of intellectual property, either patent or data related, in the 
    performance of the contract. This information may result in 
    identification of instances in which the Government already has a 
    license for itself or others acting in its behalf or the right to 
    sublicense others. Also, there may be pending antitrust actions or 
    challenges to the validity of a patent or the proprietary nature of the 
    data, or the contractor may be able to gain unrestricted access to the 
    same data through other sources. In such situations the contractor may 
    avoid the payment of a royalty in its entirety or may be charged a 
    reduced royalty.
    
    
    927.206-2  Clause for refund of royalties.
    
        The contracting officer shall insert the clause at 952.227-9, 
    Refund of Royalties, in solicitations and contracts for experimental, 
    research, developmental, or demonstration work or other solicitations 
    and contracts in which the contracting officer believes royalties will 
    have to be paid by the contractor or a subcontractor of any tier.
    
    
    927.207  Classified contracts.
    
    
    927.207-1  General.
    
        Unauthorized disclosure of classified subject matter, whether in a 
    patent application or resulting from the issuance of a patent, may be a 
    violation of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, other laws 
    relating to espionage and national security, and provisions of the 
    proposed contract pertaining to disclosure of information.
    
        3. Section 927.300 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    927.300  General.
    
        (a) One of the primary missions of the Department of Energy is the 
    use of its procurement process to ensure the conduct of research, 
    development, and demonstration leading to the ultimate 
    commercialization of efficient sources of energy. To accomplish its 
    mission, DOE must work in cooperation with industry in the development 
    of new energy sources and in achieving the ultimate goal of widespread 
    commercial use of those energy sources. To this end, Congress has 
    provided DOE with the authority to invoke an array of incentives to 
    secure the commercialization of new technologies developed for DOE. One 
    such important incentive is provided by the patent system.
        (b) Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 2182 and 42 U.S.C. 5908, DOE takes title 
    to all inventions conceived or first actually reduced to practice in 
    the course of or under contracts with large, for-profit companies, 
    foreign organizations, and others not beneficiaries of Pub. L. 96-517. 
    Regulations dealing with Department's authority to waive its title to 
    subject inventions, including the relevant statutory objectives, exist 
    at 41 CFR 9-9.109. Pursuant to that section, DOE may waive the 
    Government's patent rights in appropriate situations at the time of 
    contracting to encourage industrial participation, foster commercial 
    utilization and competition, and make the benefits of DOE activities 
    widely available to the public. In [[Page 11816]] addition to 
    considering the waiver of patent rights at the time of contracting, DOE 
    will also consider the incentive of a waiver of patent rights upon the 
    reporting of an identified invention when requested by such entities or 
    by the employee-inventor with the permission of the contractor. These 
    requests can be made whether or not a waiver request was made at the 
    time of contracting. Waivers for identified inventions will be granted 
    where it is determined that the patent waiver will be a meaningful 
    incentive to achieving the development and ultimate commercial 
    utilization of inventions. Where DOE grants a waiver of the 
    Government's patent rights, either at the time of contracting or after 
    an invention is made, certain minimum rights and obligations will be 
    required by DOE to protect the public interest.
        (c) Another major DOE mission is to manage the nation's nuclear 
    weapons and other classified programs, where research and development 
    procurements are directed toward processes and equipment not available 
    to the public. To accomplish DOE programs for bringing private industry 
    into these and other special programs to the maximum extent permitted 
    by national security and policy considerations, it is desirable that 
    the technology developed in these programs be made available on a 
    selected basis for use in the particular fields of interest and under 
    controlled conditions by properly cleared industrial and scientific 
    research institutions. To ensure such availability and control, the 
    grant of waivers in these programs may necessarily be more limited, 
    either by the imposition of field of use restrictions or national 
    security measures, than in other DOE programs.
        4. Section 927.302 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    927.302  Policy.
    
        (a) Except for contracts with organizations that are beneficiaries 
    of Public Law 96-517, the United States, as represented by DOE, shall 
    normally acquire title in and to any invention or discovery conceived 
    or first actually reduced to practice in the course of or under the 
    contract, allowing the contractor to retain a nonexclusive, revocable, 
    paid-up license in the invention and the right to request permission to 
    file an application for a patent and retain title to any ensuing patent 
    in any foreign country in which DOE does not elect to secure patent 
    rights. DOE may approve the request if it determines that such approval 
    would be in the national interest. The contractor's nonexclusive 
    license may be revoked or modified by DOE only to the extent necessary 
    to achieve expeditious practical application of the invention pursuant 
    to any application for and the grant of an exclusive license in the 
    invention to another party.
        (b) In contracts having as a purpose the conduct of research, 
    development, or demonstration work and in certain other contracts, DOE 
    may need to require those contractors that are not the beneficiaries of 
    Public Law 96-517 to license background patents to ensure reasonable 
    public availability and accessibility necessary to practice the subject 
    of the contract in the fields of technology specifically contemplated 
    in the contract effort. That need may arise where the contractor is not 
    attempting to take the technology resulting from the contract to the 
    commercial marketplace, or is not meeting market demands. The need for 
    background patent rights and the particular rights that should be 
    obtained for either the Government or the public will depend upon the 
    type, purpose, and scope of the contract effort, impact on the DOE 
    program, and the cost to the Government of obtaining such rights.
        (c) Provisions to deal specifically with DOE background patent 
    rights are contained in paragraph (k) of the clause at 952.227-13. That 
    paragraph may be modified with the concurrence of Patent Counsel in 
    order to reflect the equities of the parties in particular contracting 
    situations. Paragraph (k) should normally be deleted for contracts with 
    an estimated cost and fee or price of $250,000 or less and may not be 
    appropriate for certain types of study contracts; for planning 
    contracts; for contracts with educational institutions; for contracts 
    for specialized equipment for in-house Government use, not involving 
    use by the public; and for contracts the work products of which will 
    not be the subject of future procurements by the Government or its 
    contractors.
        (d) The Assistant General Counsel for Technology Transfer and 
    Intellectual Property shall:
        (1) Make the determination that whether reported inventions are 
    subject inventions under the patent rights clause of the contract;
        (2) Determine whether and where patent protection will be obtained 
    on inventions;
        (3) Represent DOE before domestic and foreign patent offices;
        (4) Accept assignments and instruments confirmatory of the 
    Government's rights to inventions; and
        (5) Represent DOE in patent, technical data, and copyright matters 
    not specifically reserved to the Head of the Agency or designee.
        5. Section 927.303 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    927.303  Contract clauses.
    
        (a) In solicitations and contracts for experimental, research, 
    developmental, or demonstration work (but see (FAR) 48 CFR 27.304-3 
    regarding contracts for construction work or architect-engineer 
    services), the contracting officer shall include the clause:
        (1) At 952.227-13, Patent Rights Acquisition by the Government, in 
    all such contracts other than those described in paragraphs (a)(2) and 
    (a)(3) of this section;
        (2) At 952.227-11, Patent Rights by the Contractor (Short Form), in 
    contracts in which the contractor is a domestic small business or 
    nonprofit organization as defined at (FAR) 48 CFR 27.301, except where 
    the work of the contract is subject to an Exceptional Circumstances 
    Determination by DOE; and
        (3) At 970.5204-71 or 970.5204-72, as discussed in 970.27, Patent, 
    Data, and Copyrights, in contracts for the management and operation of 
    DOE laboratories and production facilities.
        (b) DOE shall not use the clause at (FAR) 48 CFR 52.227-12 except 
    in situations where patent counsel grants a request for advance waiver 
    and supplies the contracting officer with that clause with appropriate 
    modifications. Otherwise, in instances in which DOE grants an advance 
    waiver or waives its rights in an identified invention, contracting 
    officers shall consult with patent counsel for the appropriate clause.
        6. Section 927.304 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    927.304  Procedures.
    
        Where the contract contains the clause at 952.227-11 and the 
    contractor does not elect to retain title to a subject invention, DOE 
    may consider and, after consultation with the contractor, grant 
    requests for retention of rights by the inventor subject to the 
    provisions of 35 U.S.C. 200 et seq. This statement is in lieu of (FAR) 
    48 CFR 27.304-1(c).
    
    PART 952--SOLICITATION PROVISIONS AND CONTRACT CLAUSES
    
        7. The authority citation for part 952 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7254; 40 U.S.C. 486(c).
    
        8. Subsection 952.227-9 is added to read as follows: 
    [[Page 11817]] 
    
    
    952.227-9  Refund of Royalties.
    
        As prescribed in 927.206-2, insert the following clause:
    
    Refund of Royalties (MAR 1995)
    
        (a) The contract price includes certain amounts for royalties 
    payable by the Contractor or subcontractors or both, which amounts 
    have been reported to the Contracting Officer.
        (b) The term ``royalties'' as used in this clause refers to any 
    costs or charges in the nature of royalties, license fees, patent or 
    license amortization costs, or the like, for the use of or for 
    rights in patents and patent applications in connection with 
    performing this contract or any subcontract here-under. The term 
    also includes any costs or charges associated with the access to, 
    use of, or other right pertaining to data that is represented to be 
    proprietary and is related to the performance of this contract or 
    the copying of such data or data that is copyrighted.
        (c) The Contractor shall furnish to the Contracting Officer, 
    before final payment under this contract, a statement of royalties 
    paid or required to be paid in connection with performing this 
    contract and subcontracts hereunder together with the reasons.
        (d) The Contractor will be compensated for royalties reported 
    under paragraph (c) of this clause, only to the extent that such 
    royalties were included in the contract price and are determined by 
    the Contracting Officer to be properly chargeable to the Government 
    and allocable to the contract. To the extent that any royalties that 
    are included in the contract price are not, in fact, paid by the 
    Contractor or are determined by the Contracting Officer not to be 
    properly chargeable to the government and allocable to the contract, 
    the contract price shall be reduced. Repayment or credit to the 
    Government shall be made as the Contracting Officer directs. The 
    approval by DOE of any individual payments or royalties shall not 
    prevent the Government from contesting at any time the 
    enforceability, validity, scope of, or title to, any patent or the 
    proprietary nature of data pursuant to which a royalty or other 
    payment is to be or has been made.
        (e) If, at any time within 3 years after final payment under 
    this contract, the Contractor for any reason is relieved in whole or 
    in part from the payment of the royalties included in the final 
    contract price as adjusted pursuant to paragraph (d) of this clause, 
    the Contractor shall promptly notify the Contracting Officer of that 
    fact and shall reimburse the Government in a corresponding amount.
        (f) The substance of this clause, including this paragraph (f), 
    shall be included in any subcontract in which the amount of 
    royalties reported during negotiation of the subcontract exceeds 
    $250.
    
    (End of clause)
    
        9. Subsection 952.227-11 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    952.227-11  Patent rights--retention by the contractor (short form).
    
        As prescribed in 927.303(a), insert the following clause:
    
    PATENT RIGHTS--RETENTION BY THE CONTRACTOR (SHORT FORM) (MAR 1995)
    
        (a) Definitions.
        (1) Invention means any invention or discovery which is or may 
    be patentable or otherwise protectable under title 35 of the United 
    States Code, or any novel variety of plant which is or may be 
    protected under the Plant Variety Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 2321, et 
    seq.).
        (2) Made when used in relation to any invention means the 
    conception of first actual reduction to practice of such invention.
        (3) Nonprofit organization means a university or other 
    institution of higher education or an organization of the type 
    described in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 
    (26 U.S.C. 501(c)) and exempt from taxation under section 501(a) of 
    the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 501(a)) or any nonprofit 
    scientific or educational organization qualified under a state 
    nonprofit organization statute.
        (4) Practical application means to manufacture, in the case of a 
    composition or product; to practice, in the case of a process or 
    method; or to operate, in the case of a machine or system; and, in 
    each case, under such conditions as to establish that the invention 
    is being utilized and that its benefits are, to the extent permitted 
    by law or Government regulations, available to the public on 
    reasonable terms.
        (5) Small business firm means a small business concern as 
    defined at section 2 of Public Law 85-536 (15 U.S.C. 632) and 
    implementing regulations of the Administrator of the Small Business 
    Administration. For the purpose of this clause, the size standards 
    for small business concerns involved in Government procurement and 
    subcontracting at 13 CFR 121.3-8 and 13 CFR 121.3-12, respectively, 
    will be used.
        (6) Subject invention means any invention of the contractor 
    conceived or first actually reduced to practice in the performance 
    of work under this contract, provided that in the case of a variety 
    of plant, the date of determination (as defined in section 41(d) of 
    the Plant Variety Protection Act, 7 U.S.C. 2401(d)) must also occur 
    during the period of contract performance.
        (7) Agency licensing regulations and agency regulations 
    concerning the licensing of Government-owned inventions mean the 
    Department of Energy patent licensing regulations at 10 CFR part 
    781.
        (b) Allocation of principal rights. The Contractor may retain 
    the entire right, title, and interest throughout the world to each 
    subject invention subject to the provisions of this clause and 35 
    U.S.C. 203. With respect to any subject invention in which the 
    Contractor retains title, the Federal Government shall have a 
    nonexclusive, nontransferable, irrevocable, paid-up license to 
    practice or have practiced for or on behalf of the United States the 
    subject invention throughout the world.
        (c) Invention disclosure, election of title, and filing of 
    patent application by Contractor. (1) The Contractor will disclose 
    each subject invention to the Department of Energy (DOE) within 2 
    months after the inventor discloses it in writing to Contractor 
    personnel responsible for patent matters. The disclosure to DOE 
    shall be in the form of a written report and shall identify the 
    contract under which the invention was made and the inventor(s). It 
    shall be sufficiently complete in technical detail to convey a clear 
    understanding to the extent known at the time of the disclosure, of 
    the nature, purpose, operation, and the physical, chemical, 
    biological or electrical characteristics of the invention. The 
    disclosure shall also identify any publication, on sale or public 
    use of the invention and whether a manuscript describing the 
    invention has been submitted for publication and, if so, whether it 
    has been accepted for publication at the time of disclosure. In 
    addition, after disclosure to the DOE, the Contractor will promptly 
    notify that agency of the acceptance of any manuscript describing 
    the invention for publication or of any on sale or public use 
    planned by the Contractor.
        (2) The Contractor will elect in writing whether or not to 
    retain title to any such invention by notifying DOE within 2 years 
    of disclosure to DOE. However, in any case where publication, on 
    sale or public use has initiated the l-year statutory period wherein 
    valid patent protection can still be obtained in the United States, 
    the period for election of title may be shortened by DOE to a date 
    that is no more than 60 days prior to the end of the statutory 
    period.
        (3) The Contractor will file its initial patent application on a 
    subject invention to which it elects to retain title within 1 year 
    after election of title or, if earlier, prior to the end of any 
    statutory period wherein valid patent protection can be obtained in 
    the United States after a publication, on sale, or public use. The 
    Contractor will file patent applications in additional countries or 
    international patent offices within either 10 months of the 
    corresponding initial patent application or 6 months from the date 
    permission is granted by the Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks 
    to file foreign patent applications where such filing has been 
    prohibited by a Secrecy Order.
        (4) Requests for extension of the time for disclosure, election, 
    and filing under subparagraphs (c)(l), (2), and (3) of this clause 
    may, at the discretion of the agency, be granted.
        (d) Conditions when the Government may obtain title. The 
    Contractor will convey to the Federal agency, upon written request, 
    title to any subject invention--
        (1) If the Contractor fails to disclose or elect title to the 
    subject invention within the times specified in paragraph (c) of 
    this clause, or elects not to retain title; provided, that DOE may 
    only request title within 60 days after learning of the failure of 
    the Contractor to disclose or elect within the specified times.
        (2) In those countries in which the Contractor fails to file 
    patent applications within the times specified in paragraph (c) of 
    this clause; provided, however, that if the Contractor has filed a 
    patent application in a country after the times specified in 
    paragraph (c) of this clause, but prior to its receipt of the 
    written request of the Federal agency, the Contractor shall continue 
    to retain title in that country. [[Page 11818]] 
        (3) In any country in which the Contractor decides not to 
    continue the prosecution of any application for, to pay the 
    maintenance fees on, or defend in reexamination or opposition 
    proceeding on, a patent on a subject invention.
        (e) Minimum rights to Contractor and protection of the 
    Contractor right to file. (1) The Contractor will retain a 
    nonexclusive royalty-free license throughout the world in each 
    subject invention to which the Government obtains title, except if 
    the Contractor fails to disclose the invention within the times 
    specified in paragraph (c) of this clause. The Contractor's license 
    extends to its domestic subsidiary and affiliates, if any, within 
    the corporate structure of which the Contractor is a party and 
    includes the right to grant sublicenses of the same scope to the 
    extent the Contractor was legally obligated to do so at the time the 
    contract was awarded. The license is transferable only with the 
    approval of the Federal agency, except when transferred to the 
    successor of that part of the Contractor's business to which the 
    invention pertains.
        (2) The Contractor's domestic license may be revoked or modified 
    by DOE to the extent necessary to achieve expeditious practical 
    application of subject invention pursuant to an application for an 
    exclusive license submitted in accordance with applicable provisions 
    at 37 CFR part 404 and agency licensing regulations. This license 
    will not be revoked in that field of use or the geographical areas 
    in which the Contractor has achieved practical application and 
    continues to make the benefits of the invention reasonably 
    accessible to the public. The license in any foreign country may be 
    revoked or modified at the discretion of DOE to the extent the 
    Contractor, its licensees, or the domestic subsidiaries or 
    affiliates have failed to achieve practical application in that 
    foreign country.
        (3) Before revocation or modification of the license, DOE will 
    furnish the Contractor a written notice of its intention to revoke 
    or modify the license, and the Contractor will be allowed 30 days 
    (or such other time as may be authorized by DOE for good cause shown 
    by the Contractor) after the notice to show cause why the license 
    should not be revoked or modified. The Contractor has the right to 
    appeal, in accordance with applicable regulations in 37 CFR part 404 
    and agency regulations concerning the licensing of Government owned 
    inventions, any decision concerning the revocation or modification 
    of the license.
        (f) Contractor action to protect the Government's interest. (1) 
    The Contractor agrees to execute or to have executed and promptly 
    deliver to DOE all instruments necessary to (i) establish or confirm 
    the rights the Government has throughout the world in those subject 
    inventions to which the Contractor elects to retain title, and (ii) 
    convey title to DOE when requested under paragraph (d) of this 
    clause and to enable the government to obtain patent protection 
    throughout the world in that subject invention.
        (2) The Contractor agrees to require, by written agreement, its 
    employees, other than clerical and nontechnical employees, to 
    disclose promptly in writing to personnel identified as responsible 
    for the administration of patent matters and in a format suggested 
    by the Contractor each subject invention made under contract in 
    order that the Contractor can comply with the disclosure provisions 
    of paragraph (c) of this clause, and to execute all papers necessary 
    to file patent applications on subject inventions and to establish 
    the Government's rights in the subject inventions. This disclosure 
    format should require, as a minimum, the information required by 
    subparagraph (c)(1) of this clause. The Contractor shall instruct 
    such employees, through employee agreements or other suitable 
    educational programs, on the importance of reporting inventions in 
    sufficient time to permit the filing of patent applications prior to 
    U.S. or foreign statutory bars.
        (3) The Contractor will notify DOE of any decision not to 
    continue the prosecution of a patent application, pay maintenance 
    fees, or defend in a reexamination or opposition proceeding on a 
    patent, in any country, not less than 30 days before the expiration 
    of the response period required by the relevant patent office.
        (4) The Contractor agrees to include, within the specification 
    of any United States patent application and any patent issuing 
    thereon covering a subject invention, the following statement, 
    ``This invention was made with Government support under (identify 
    the contract) awarded by the United States Department of Energy. The 
    Government has certain rights in the invention.''
        (g) Subcontracts. (1) The Contractor will include this clause, 
    suitably modified to identify the parties, in all subcontracts, 
    regardless of tier, for experimental, developmental, or research 
    work to be performed by a small business firm or domestic nonprofit 
    organization. The subcontractor will retain all rights provided for 
    the Contractor in this clause, and the Contractor will not, as part 
    of the consideration for awarding the subcontract, obtain rights in 
    the subcontractor's subject inventions.
        (2) The contractor shall include in all other subcontracts, 
    regardless of tier, for experimental, developmental, demonstration, 
    or research work the patent rights clause at 952.227-13.
        (3) In the case of subcontracts, at any tier, DOE, 
    subcontractor, and the Contractor agree that the mutual obligations 
    of the parties created by this clause constitute a contract between 
    the subcontractor and DOE with respect to the matters covered by the 
    clause; provided, however, that nothing in this paragraph is 
    intended to confer any jurisdiction under the Contract Disputes Act 
    in connection with proceedings under paragraph (j) of this clause.
        (h) Reporting on utilization of subject inventions. The 
    Contractor agrees to submit, on request, periodic reports no more 
    frequently than annually on the utilization of a subject invention 
    or on efforts at obtaining such utilization that are being made by 
    the Contractor or its licensees or assignees. Such reports shall 
    include information regarding the status of development, date of 
    first commercial sale or use, gross royalties received, by the 
    Contractor, and such other data and information as DOE may 
    reasonably specify. The Contractor also agrees to provide additional 
    reports as may be requested by DOE in connection with any march-in 
    proceeding undertaken by that agency in accordance with paragraph 
    (j) of this clause. As required by 35 U.S.C. 202(c)(5), DOE agrees 
    it will not disclose such information to persons outside the 
    Government without permission of the Contractor.
        (i) Preference for United States industry. Notwithstanding any 
    other provision of this clause, the Contractor agrees that neither 
    it nor any assignee will grant to any person the exclusive right to 
    use or sell any subject invention in the United States unless such 
    person agrees that any product embodying the subject invention or 
    produced through the use of the subject invention will be 
    manufactured substantially in the United States. However, in 
    individual cases, the requirement for such an agreement may be 
    waived by DOE upon a showing by the Contractor or its assignee that 
    reasonable but unsuccessful efforts have been made to grant licenses 
    on similar terms to potential licensees that would be likely to 
    manufacture substantially in the United States or that under the 
    circumstances domestic manufacture is not commercially feasible.
        (j) March-in rights. The Contractor agrees that, with respect to 
    any subject invention in which it has acquired title, DOE has the 
    right in accordance with the procedures in 37 CFR 401.6 and any 
    supplemental regulations of the agency to require the Contractor, an 
    assignee or exclusive licensee of a subject invention to grant a 
    nonexclusive, partially exclusive, or exclusive license in any field 
    of use to a responsible applicant or applicants, upon terms that are 
    reasonable under the circumstances, and, if the Contractor, 
    assignee, or exclusive licensee refuses such a request, DOE has the 
    right to grant such a license itself if DOE determines that--
        (1) Such action is necessary because the Contractor or assignee 
    has not taken, or is not expected to take within a reasonable time, 
    effective steps to achieve practical application of the subject 
    invention in such field of use;
        (2) Such action is necessary to alleviate health or safety needs 
    which are not reasonably satisfied by the Contractor, assignee, or 
    their licensees;
        (3) Such action is necessary to meet requirements for public use 
    specified by Federal regulations and such requirements are not 
    reasonably satisfied by the Contractor, assignee, or licensees; or
        (4) Such action is necessary because the agreement required by 
    paragraph (i) of this clause has not been obtained or waived or 
    because a licensee of the exclusive right to use or sell any subject 
    invention in the United States is in breach of such agreement.
        (k) Special provisions for contracts with nonprofit 
    organizations. If the Contractor is a nonprofit organization, it 
    agrees that--
        (1) Rights to a subject invention in the United States may not 
    be assigned without the approval of the Federal agency, except where 
    such assignment is made to an [[Page 11819]] organization which has 
    as one of its primary functions the management of inventions; 
    provided, that such assignee will be subject to the same provisions 
    as the Contractor;
        (2) The Contractor will share royalties collected on a subject 
    invention with the inventor, including Federal employee co-inventors 
    (when DOE deems it appropriate) when the subject invention is 
    assigned in accordance with 35 U.S.C. 202(e) and 37 CFR 401.10;
        (3) The balance of any royalties or income earned by the 
    Contractor with respect to subject inventions, after payment of 
    expenses (including payments to inventors) incidental to the 
    administration of subject inventions will be utilized for the 
    support of scientific research or education; and
        (4) It will make efforts that are reasonable under the 
    circumstances to attract licensees of subject inventions that are 
    small business firms, and that it will give a preference to a small 
    business firm when licensing a subject invention if the Contractor 
    determines that the small business firm has a plan or proposal for 
    marketing the invention which, if executed, is equally as likely to 
    bring the invention to practical application as any plans or 
    proposals from applicants that are not small business firms; 
    provided, that the Contractor is also satisfied that the small 
    business firm has the capability and resources to carry out its plan 
    or proposal. The decision whether to give a preference in any 
    specific case will be at the discretion of the contractor. However, 
    the Contractor agrees that the Secretary of Commerce may review the 
    Contractor's licensing program and decisions regarding small 
    business applicants, and the Contractor will negotiate changes to 
    its licensing policies, procedures, or practices with the Secretary 
    of Commerce when that Secretary's review discloses that the 
    Contractor could take reasonable steps to more effectively implement 
    the requirements of this subparagraph (k)(4).
        (l) Communications.
        (1) The contractor shall direct any notification, disclosure, or 
    request to DOE provided for in this clause to the DOE patent counsel 
    assisting the DOE contracting activity, with a copy of the 
    communication to the Contracting Officer.
        (2) Each exercise of discretion or decision provided for in this 
    clause, except subparagraph (k)(4), is reserved for the DOE Patent 
    Counsel and is not a claim or dispute and is not subject to the 
    Contract Disputes Act of 1978.
        (3) Upon request of the DOE Patent Counsel or the contracting 
    officer, the contractor shall provide any or all of the following:
        (i) A copy of the patent application, filing date, serial number 
    and title, patent number, and issue date for any subject invention 
    in any country in which the contractor has applied for a patent;
        (ii) A report, not more often than annually, summarizing all 
    subject inventions which were disclosed to DOE individually during 
    the reporting period specified; or
        (iii) A report, prior to closeout of the contract, listing all 
    subject inventions or stating that there were none.
    
    (End of clause)
    
        10. Subsection 952.227-13 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    952.227-13  Patent Rights--Acquisition by the Government.
    
        As prescribed at 927.303(c), insert the following clause:
    
    PATENT RIGHTS--ACQUISITION BY THE GOVERNMENT (MAR 1995)
    
        (a) Definitions.
        Invention, as used in this clause, means any invention or 
    discovery which is or may be patentable or otherwise protectable 
    under title 35 of the United States Code or any novel variety of 
    plant that is or may be protectable under the Plant Variety 
    Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 2321, et seq.).
        Practical application, as used in this clause, means to 
    manufacture, in the case of a composition or product; to practice, 
    in the case of a process or method; or to operate, in the case of a 
    machine or system; and, in each case, under such conditions as to 
    establish that the invention is being utilized and that its benefits 
    are, to the extent permitted by law or Government regulations, 
    available to the public on reasonable terms.
        Subject invention, as used in this clause, means any invention 
    of the Contractor conceived or first actually reduced to practice in 
    the course of or under this contract.
        Patent Counsel, as used in this clause, means the Department of 
    Energy Patent Counsel assisting the procuring activity.
        DOE patent waiver regulations, as used in this clause, means the 
    Department of Energy patent waiver regulations in effect on the date 
    of award of this contract.
        Agency licensing regulations and applicable agency licensing 
    regulations, as used in this clause, mean the Department of Energy 
    patent licensing regulations at 10 CFR part 781.
        (b) Allocations of principal rights.
        (1) Assignment to the Government. The Contractor agrees to 
    assign to the Government the entire right, title, and interest 
    throughout the world in and to each subject invention, except to the 
    extent that rights are retained by the Contractor under subparagraph 
    (b)(2) and paragraph (d) of this clause.
        (2) Greater rights determinations. (i) The Contractor, or an 
    employee-inventor after consultation with the Contractor, may 
    request greater rights than the nonexclusive license and the foreign 
    patent rights provided in paragraph (d) of this clause on identified 
    inventions in accordance with the DOE patent waiver regulations. A 
    request for a determination of whether the Contractor or the 
    employee-inventor is entitled to acquire such greater rights must be 
    submitted to the Patent Counsel with a copy to the Contracting 
    Officer at the time of the first disclosure of the invention 
    pursuant to subparagraph (e)(2) of this clause, or not later than 8 
    months thereafter, unless a longer period is authorized in writing 
    by the Contracting Officer for good cause shown in writing by the 
    Contractor. Each determination of greater rights under this contract 
    shall be subject to paragraph (c) of this clause, unless otherwise 
    provided in the greater rights determination, and to the 
    reservations and conditions deemed to be appropriate by the 
    Secretary of Energy or designee.
        (ii) Within two (2) months after the filing of a patent 
    application, the Contractor shall provide the filing date, serial 
    number and title, a copy of the patent application (including an 
    English-language version if filed in a language other than English), 
    and, promptly upon issuance of a patent, provide the patent number 
    and issue date for any subject invention in any country for which 
    the Contractor has been granted title or the right to file and 
    prosecute on behalf of the United States by the Department of 
    Energy.
        (iii) Not less than thirty (30) days before the expiration of 
    the response period for any action required by the Patent and 
    Trademark Office, notify the Patent Counsel of any decision not to 
    continue prosecution of the application.
        (iv) Upon request, the Contractor shall furnish the Government 
    an irrevocable power to inspect and make copies of the patent 
    application file.
        (c) Minimum rights acquired by the Government.
        (1) With respect to each subject invention to which the 
    Department of Energy grants the Contractor principal or exclusive 
    rights, the Contractor agrees as follows:
        (i) The Contractor hereby grants to the Government a 
    nonexclusive, nontransferable, irrevocable, paid-up license to 
    practice or have practiced each subject invention throughout the 
    world by or on behalf of the Government of the United States 
    (including any Government agency).
        (ii) The Contractor agrees that with respect to any subject 
    invention in which DOE has granted it title, DOE has the right in 
    accordance with the procedures in the DOE patent waiver regulations 
    to require the Contractor, an assignee, or exclusive licensee of a 
    subject invention to grant a nonexclusive, partially exclusive, or 
    exclusive license in any field of use to a responsible applicant or 
    applicants, upon terms that are reasonable under the circumstances, 
    and if the Contractor, assignee, or exclusive licensee refuses such 
    a request, DOE has the right to grant such a license itself if it 
    determines that--
        (A) Such action is necessary because the Contractor or assignee 
    has not taken, or is not expected to take within a reasonable time, 
    effective steps to achieve practical application of the subject 
    invention in such field of use;
        (B) Such action is necessary to alleviate health or safety needs 
    which are not reasonably satisfied by the Contractor, assignee, or 
    their licensees;
        (C) Such action is necessary to meet requirements for public use 
    specified by Federal regulations and such requirements are not 
    reasonably satisfied by the Contractor, assignee, or licensees; or
        (D) Such action is necessary because the agreement required by 
    paragraph (i) of this clause has neither been obtained nor waived or 
    because a licensee of the exclusive right to use or sell any subject 
    invention in the United States is in breach of such agreement. 
    [[Page 11820]] 
        (iii) The Contractor agrees to submit on request periodic 
    reports no more frequently than annually on the utilization of a 
    subject invention or on efforts at obtaining such utilization of a 
    subject invention or on efforts at obtaining such utilization that 
    are being made by the Contractor or its licensees or assignees. Such 
    reports shall include information regarding the status of 
    development, date of first commercial sale or use, gross royalties 
    received by the Contractor, and such other data and information as 
    DOE may reasonably specify. The Contractor also agrees to provide 
    additional reports as may be requested by DOE in connection with any 
    march-in proceedings undertaken by that agency in accordance with 
    subparagraph (c)(1)(ii) of this clause. To the extent data or 
    information supplied under this section is considered by the 
    Contractor, its licensee, or assignee to be privileged and 
    confidential and is so marked, the Department of Energy agrees that, 
    to the extent permitted by law, it will not disclose such 
    information to persons outside the Government.
        (iv) The Contractor agrees, when licensing a subject invention, 
    to arrange to avoid royalty charges on acquisitions involving 
    Government funds, including funds derived through a Military 
    Assistance Program of the Government or otherwise derived through 
    the Government, to refund any amounts received as royalty charges on 
    a subject invention in acquisitions for, or on behalf of, the 
    Government, and to provide for such refund in any instrument 
    transferring rights in the invention to any party.
        (v) The Contractor agrees to provide for the Government's paid-
    up license pursuant to subparagraph (c)(1)(i) of this clause in any 
    instrument transferring rights in a subject invention and to provide 
    for the granting of licenses as required by subparagraph (c)(1)(ii) 
    of this clause, and for the reporting of utilization information as 
    required by subparagraph (c)(1)(iii) of this clause, whenever the 
    instrument transfers principal or exclusive rights in a subject 
    invention.
        (2) Nothing contained in this paragraph (c) shall be deemed to 
    grant to the Government any rights with respect to any invention 
    other than a subject invention.
        (d) Minimum rights to the Contractor. (1) The Contractor is 
    hereby granted a revocable, nonexclusive, royalty-free license in 
    each patent application filed in any country on a subject invention 
    and any resulting patent in which the Government obtains title, 
    unless the Contractor fails to disclose the subject invention within 
    the times specified in subparagraph (e)(2) of this clause. The 
    Contractor's license extends to its domestic subsidiaries and 
    affiliates, if any, within the corporate structure of which the 
    Contractor is a part and includes the right to grant sublicenses of 
    the same scope to the extent the Contractor was legally obligated to 
    do so at the time the contract was awarded. The license is 
    transferable only with the approval of DOE except when transferred 
    to the successor of that part of the Contractor's business to which 
    the invention pertains.
        (2) The Contractor's domestic license may be revoked or modified 
    by DOE to the extent necessary to achieve expeditious practical 
    application of the subject invention pursuant to an application for 
    an exclusive license submitted in accordance with applicable 
    provisions in 37 CFR part 404 and agency licensing regulations. This 
    license will not be revoked in that field of use or the geographical 
    areas in which the Contractor has achieved practical applications 
    and continues to make the benefits of the invention reasonably 
    accessible to the public. The license in any foreign country may be 
    revoked or modified at the discretion of DOE to the extent the 
    Contractor, its licensees, or its domestic subsidiaries or 
    affiliates have failed to achieve practical application in that 
    foreign country.
        (3) Before revocation or modification of the license, DOE will 
    furnish the Contractor a written notice of its intention to revoke 
    or modify the license, and the Contractor will be allowed 30 days 
    (or such other time as may be authorized by DOE for good cause shown 
    by the Contractor) after the notice to show cause why the license 
    should not be revoked or modified. The Contractor has the right to 
    appeal, in accordance with applicable agency licensing regulations 
    and 37 CFR part 404 concerning the licensing of Government-owned 
    inventions, any decision concerning the revocation or modification 
    of its license.
        (4) The Contractor may request the right to acquire patent 
    rights to a subject invention in any foreign country where the 
    Government has elected not to secure such rights, subject to the 
    conditions in subparagraphs (d)(4)(i) through (d)(4)(vii) of this 
    clause. Such request must be made in writing to the Patent Counsel 
    as part of the disclosure required by subparagraph (e)(2) of this 
    clause, with a copy to the DOE Contracting Officer. DOE approval, if 
    given, will be based on a determination that this would best serve 
    the national interest.
        (i) The recipient of such rights, when specifically requested by 
    DOE, and three years after issuance of a foreign patent disclosing 
    the subject invention, shall furnish DOE a report stating:
        (A) The commercial use that is being made, or is intended to be 
    made, of said invention, and
        (B) The steps taken to bring the invention to the point of 
    practical application or to make the invention available for 
    licensing.
        (ii) The Government shall retain at least an irrevocable, 
    nonexclusive, paid-up license to make, use, and sell the invention 
    throughout the world by or on behalf of the Government (including 
    any Government agency) and States and domestic municipal 
    governments, unless the Secretary of Energy or designee determines 
    that it would not be in the public interest to acquire the license 
    for the States and domestic municipal governments.
        (iii) If noted elsewhere in this contract as a condition of the 
    grant of an advance waiver of the Government's title to inventions 
    under this contract, or, if no advance waiver was granted but a 
    waiver of the Government's title to an identified invention is 
    granted pursuant to subparagraph (b)(2) of this clause upon a 
    determination by the Secretary of Energy that it is in the 
    Government's best interest, this license shall include the right of 
    the Government to sublicense foreign governments pursuant to any 
    existing or future treaty or agreement with such foreign 
    governments.
        (iv) Subject to the rights granted in subparagraphs (d)(1), (2), 
    and (3) of this clause, the Secretary of Energy or designee shall 
    have the right to terminate the foreign patent rights granted in 
    this subparagraph (d)(4) in whole or in part unless the recipient of 
    such rights demonstrates to the satisfaction of the Secretary of 
    Energy or designee that effective steps necessary to accomplish 
    substantial utilization of the invention have been taken or within a 
    reasonable time will be taken.
        (v) Subject to the rights granted in subparagraphs (d)(1), (2), 
    and (3) of this clause, the Secretary of Energy or designee shall 
    have the right, commencing four years after foreign patent rights 
    are accorded under this subparagraph (d)(4), to require the granting 
    of a nonexclusive or partially exclusive license to a responsible 
    applicant or applicants, upon terms reasonable under the 
    circumstances, and in appropriate circumstances to terminate said 
    foreign patent rights in whole or in part, following a hearing upon 
    notice thereof to the public, upon a petition by an interested 
    person justifying such hearing:
        (A) If the Secretary of Energy or designee determines, upon 
    review of such material as he deems relevant, and after the 
    recipient of such rights or other interested person has had the 
    opportunity to provide such relevant and material information as the 
    Secretary or designee may require, that such foreign patent rights 
    have tended substantially to lessen competition or to result in 
    undue market concentration in any section of the United States in 
    any line of commerce to which the technology relates; or
        (B) Unless the recipient of such rights demonstrates to the 
    satisfaction of the Secretary of Energy or designee at such hearing 
    that the recipient has taken effective steps, or within a reasonable 
    time thereafter is expected to take such steps, necessary to 
    accomplish substantial utilization of the invention.
        (vi) If the contractor is to file a foreign patent application 
    on a subject invention, the Government agrees, upon written request, 
    to use its best efforts to withhold publication of such invention 
    disclosures for such period of time as specified by Patent Counsel, 
    but in no event shall the Government or its employees be liable for 
    any publication thereof.
        (vii) Subject to the license specified in subparagraphs (d) (1), 
    (2), and (3) of this clause, the contractor or inventor agrees to 
    convey to the Government, upon request, the entire right, title, and 
    interest in any foreign country in which the contractor or inventor 
    fails to have a patent application filed in a timely manner or 
    decides not to continue prosecution or to pay any maintenance fees 
    covering the invention. To avoid forfeiture of the patent 
    application or patent, the contractor or inventor shall, not less 
    than 60 days before the expiration period for any action required by 
    any patent office, notify the Patent Counsel of such failure or 
    decision, and deliver to the Patent Counsel, the executed 
    instruments necessary for the conveyance specified in this 
    paragraph. [[Page 11821]] 
        (e) Invention identification, disclosures, and reports. (1) The 
    Contractor shall establish and maintain active and effective 
    procedures to assure that subject inventions are promptly identified 
    and disclosed to Contractor personnel responsible for patent matters 
    within 6 months of conception and/or first actual reduction to 
    practice, whichever occurs first in the performance of work under 
    this contract. These procedures shall include the maintenance of 
    laboratory notebooks or equivalent records and other records as are 
    reasonably necessary to document the conception and/or the first 
    actual reduction to practice of subject inventions, and records that 
    show that the procedures for identifying and disclosing the 
    inventions are followed. Upon request, the Contractor shall furnish 
    the Contracting Officer a description of such procedures for 
    evaluation and for determination as to their effectiveness.
        (2) The Contractor shall disclose each subject invention to the 
    DOE Patent Counsel with a copy to the Contracting Officer within 2 
    months after the inventor discloses it in writing to Contractor 
    personnel responsible for patent matters or, if earlier, within 6 
    months after the Contractor becomes aware that a subject invention 
    has been made, but in any event before any on sale, public use, or 
    publication of such invention known to the Contractor. The 
    disclosure to DOE shall be in the form of a written report and shall 
    identify the contract under which the invention was made and the 
    inventor(s). It shall be sufficiently complete in technical detail 
    to convey a clear understanding, to the extent known at the time of 
    the disclosure, of the nature, purpose, operation, and physical, 
    chemical, biological, or electrical characteristics of the 
    invention. The disclosure shall also identify any publication, on 
    sale, or public use of the invention and whether a manuscript 
    describing the invention has been submitted for publication and, if 
    so, whether it has been accepted for publication at the time of 
    disclosure. In addition, after disclosure to DOE, the Contractor 
    shall promptly notify Patent Counsel of the acceptance of any 
    manuscript describing the invention for publication or of any on 
    sale or public use planned by the Contractor. The report should also 
    include any request for a greater rights determination in accordance 
    with subparagraph (b)(2) of this clause. When an invention is 
    disclosed to DOE under this paragraph, it shall be deemed to have 
    been made in the manner specified in Sections (a)(1) and (a)(2) of 
    42 U.S.C. 5908, unless the Contractor contends in writing at the 
    time the invention is disclosed that is was not so made.
        (3) The Contractor shall furnish the Contracting Officer the 
    following:
        (i) Interim reports every 12 months (or such longer period as 
    may be specified by the Contracting Officer) from the date of the 
    contract, listing subject inventions during that period, and 
    certifying that all subject inventions have been disclosed (or that 
    there are not such inventions) and that the procedures required by 
    subparagraph (e)(1) of this clause have been followed.
        (ii) A final report, within 3 months after completion of the 
    contracted work listing all subject inventions or certifying that 
    there were no such inventions, and listing all subcontracts at any 
    tier containing a patent rights clause or certifying that there were 
    no such subcontracts.
        (4) The Contractor agrees to require, by written agreement, its 
    employees, other than clerical and nontechnical employees, to 
    disclose promptly in writing to personnel identified as responsible 
    for the administration of patent matters and in a format suggested 
    by the Contractor each subject invention made under contract in 
    order that the Contractor can comply with the disclosure provisions 
    of paragraph (c) of this clause, and to execute all papers necessary 
    to file patent applications on subject inventions and to establish 
    the Government's rights in the subject inventions. This disclosure 
    format should require, as a minimum, the information required by 
    subparagraph (e)(2) of this clause.
        (5) The Contractor agrees, subject to FAR 27.302(j), that the 
    Government may duplicate and disclose subject invention disclosures 
    and all other reports and papers furnished or required to be 
    furnished pursuant to this clause.
        (f) Examination of records relating to inventions.
        (1) The Contracting Officer or any authorized representative 
    shall, until 3 years after final payment under this contract, have 
    the right to examine any books (including laboratory notebooks), 
    records, and documents of the Contractor relating to the conception 
    or first actual reduction to practice of inventions in the same 
    field of technology as the work under this contract to determine 
    whether--
        (i) Any such inventions are subject inventions;
        (ii) The Contractor has established and maintains the procedures 
    required by subparagraphs (e) (1) and (4) of this clause;
        (iii) The Contractor and its inventors have complied with the 
    procedures.
        (2) If the Contracting Officer learns of an unreported 
    Contractor invention which the Contracting Officer believes may be a 
    subject invention, the Contractor may be required to disclose the 
    invention to DOE for a determination of ownership rights.
        (3) Any examination of records under this paragraph will be 
    subject to appropriate conditions to protect the confidentiality of 
    the information involved.
        (g) Withholding of payment (This paragraph does not apply to 
    subcontracts). (1) Any time before final payment under this 
    contract, the Contracting Officer may, in the Government's interest, 
    withhold payment until a reserve not exceeding $50,000 or 5 percent 
    of the amount of this contract, whichever is less, shall have been 
    set aside if, in the Contracting Officer's opinion, the Contractor 
    fails to--
        (i) Convey to the Government, using a DOE-approved form, the 
    title and/or rights of the Government in each subject invention as 
    required by this clause.
        (ii) Establish, maintain, and follow effective procedures for 
    identifying and disclosing subject inventions pursuant to 
    subparagraph (e)(1) of this clause;
        (iii) Disclose any subject invention pursuant to subparagraph 
    (e)(2) of this clause;
        (iv) Deliver acceptable interim reports pursuant to subparagraph 
    (e)(3)(i) of this clause; or
        (v) Provide the information regarding subcontracts pursuant to 
    subparagraph (h)(4) of this clause.
        (2) Such reserve or balance shall be withheld until the 
    Contracting Officer has determined that the Contractor has rectified 
    whatever deficiencies exist and has delivered all reports, 
    disclosures, and other information required by this clause.
        (3) Final payment under this contract shall not be made before 
    the Contractor delivers to the Contracting Officer all disclosures 
    of subject inventions required by subparagraph (e)(2) of this 
    clause, and acceptable final report pursuant to subparagraph 
    (e)(3)(ii) of this clause, and the Patent Counsel has issued a 
    patent clearance certification to the Contracting Officer.
        (4) The Contracting Officer may decrease or increase the sums 
    withheld up to the maximum authorized above. No amount shall be 
    withheld under this paragraph while the amount specified by this 
    paragraph is being withheld under other provisions of the contract. 
    The withholding of any amount or the subsequent payment thereof 
    shall not be construed as a waiver of any Government rights.
        (h) Subcontracts.
        (1) The contractor shall include the clause at 48 CFR 952.227-11 
    (suitably modified to identify the parties) in all subcontracts, 
    regardless of tier, for experimental, developmental, demonstration, 
    or research work to be performed by a small business firm or 
    domestic nonprofit organization, except where the work of the 
    subcontract is subject to an Exceptional Circumstances Determination 
    by DOE. In all other subcontracts, regardless of tier, for 
    experimental, developmental, demonstration, or research work, the 
    contractor shall include this clause (suitably modified to identify 
    the parties). The contractor shall not, as part of the consideration 
    for awarding the subcontract, obtain rights in the subcontractor's 
    subject inventions.
        (2) In the event of a refusal by a prospective subcontractor to 
    accept such a clause the Contractor--
        (i) Shall promptly submit a written notice to the Contracting 
    Officer setting forth the subcontractor's reasons for such refusal 
    and other pertinent information that may expedite disposition of the 
    matter; and
        (ii) Shall not proceed with such subcontract without the written 
    authorization of the Contracting Officer.
        (3) In the case of subcontracts at any tier, DOE, the 
    subcontractor, and Contractor agree that the mutual obligations of 
    the parties created by this clause constitute a contract between the 
    subcontractor and DOE with respect to those matters covered by this 
    clause.
        (4) The Contractor shall promptly notify the Contracting Officer 
    in writing upon the award of any subcontract at any tier containing 
    a patent rights clause by identifying the subcontractor, the 
    applicable [[Page 11822]] patent rights clause, the work to be 
    performed under the subcontract, and the dates of award and 
    estimated completion. Upon request of the Contracting Officer, the 
    Contractor shall furnish a copy of such subcontract, and, no more 
    frequently than annually, a listing of the subcontracts that have 
    been awarded.
        (5) The contractor shall identify all subject inventions of the 
    subcontractor of which it acquires knowledge in the performance of 
    this contract and shall notify the Patent Counsel, with a copy to 
    the contracting officer, promptly upon identification of the 
    inventions.
        (i) Preference United States industry. Unless provided 
    otherwise, no Contractor that receives title to any subject 
    invention and no assignee of any such Contractor shall grant to any 
    person the exclusive right to use or sell any subject invention in 
    the United States unless such person agrees that any products 
    embodying the subject invention will be manufactured substantially 
    in the United States. However, in individual cases, the requirement 
    may be waived by the Government upon a showing by the Contractor or 
    assignee that reasonable but unsuccessful efforts have been made to 
    grant licenses on similar terms to potential licensees that would be 
    likely to manufacture substantially in the United States or that 
    under the circumstances domestic manufacture is not commercially 
    feasible.
        (j) Atomic energy.
        (1) No claim for pecuniary award of compensation under the 
    provisions of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, shall be 
    asserted with respect to any invention or discovery made or 
    conceived in the course of or under this contract.
        (2) Except as otherwise authorized in writing by the Contracting 
    Officer, the Contractor will obtain patent agreements to effectuate 
    the provisions of subparagraph (e)(1) of this clause from all 
    persons who perform any part of the work under this contract, except 
    nontechnical personnel, such as clerical employees and manual 
    laborers.
        (k) Background Patents. (1) Background Patent means a domestic 
    patent covering an invention or discovery which is not a subject 
    invention and which is owned or controlled by the Contractor at any 
    time through the completion of this contract:
        (i) Which the contractor, but not the Government, has the right 
    to license to others without obligation to pay royalties thereon, 
    and
        (ii) Infringement of which cannot reasonably be avoided upon the 
    practice of any specific process, method, machine, manufacture, or 
    composition of matter (including relatively minor modifications 
    thereof) which is a subject of the research, development, or 
    demonstration work performed under this contract.
        (2) The Contractor agrees to and does hereby grant to the 
    Government a royalty-free, nonexclusive license under any background 
    patent for purposes of practicing a subject of this contract by or 
    for the Government in research, development, and demonstration work 
    only.
        (3) The Contractor also agrees that upon written application by 
    DOE, it will grant to responsible parties, for purposes of 
    practicing a subject of this contract, nonexclusive licenses under 
    any background patent on terms that are reasonable under the 
    circumstances. If, however, the Contractor believes that exclusive 
    rights are necessary to achieve expeditious commercial development 
    or utilization, then a request may be made to DOE for DOE approval 
    of such licensing by the Contractor.
        (4) Notwithstanding subparagraph (k)(3) of this clause, the 
    contractor shall not be obligated to license any background patent 
    if the Contractor demonstrates to the satisfaction of the Secretary 
    of Energy or designee that:
        (i) A competitive alternative to the subject matter covered by 
    said background patent is commercially available or readily 
    introducible from one or more other sources; or
        (ii) The Contractor or its licensees are supplying the subject 
    matter covered by said background patent in sufficient quantity and 
    at reasonable prices to satisfy market needs, or have taken 
    effective steps or within a reasonable time are expected to take 
    effective steps to so supply the subject matter.
        (l) Publication. It is recognized that during the course of the 
    work under this contract, the Contractor or its employees may from 
    time to time desire to release or publish information regarding 
    scientific or technical developments conceived or first actually 
    reduced to practice in the course of or under this contract. In 
    order that public disclosure of such information will not adversely 
    affect the patent interests of DOE or the Contractor, patent 
    approval for release of publication shall be secured from Patent 
    Counsel prior to any such release or publication.
        (m) Forfeiture of rights in unreported subject inventions. (1) 
    The Contractor shall forfeit and assign to the Government, at the 
    request of the Secretary of Energy or designee, all rights in any 
    subject invention which the Contractor fails to report to Patent 
    Counsel within six months after the time the Contractor:
        (i) Files or causes to be filed a United States or foreign 
    patent application thereon; or
        (ii) Submits the final report required by subparagraph 
    (e)(2)(ii) of this clause, whichever is later.
        (2) However, the Contractor shall not forfeit rights in a 
    subject invention if, within the time specified in subparagraph 
    (m)(1) of this clause, the Contractor:
        (i) Prepares a written decision based upon a review of the 
    record that the invention was neither conceived nor first actually 
    reduced to practice in the course of or under the contract and 
    delivers the decision to Patent Counsel, with a copy to the 
    Contracting Officer; or
        (ii) Contending that the invention is not a subject invention, 
    the Contractor nevertheless discloses the invention and all facts 
    pertinent to this contention to the Patent Counsel, with a copy to 
    the Contracting Officer; or
        (iii) Establishes that the failure to disclose did not result 
    from the Contractor's fault or negligence.
        (3) Pending written assignment of the patent application and 
    patents on a subject invention determined by the Secretary of Energy 
    or designee to be forfeited (such determination to be a final 
    decision under the Disputes clause of this contract), the Contractor 
    shall be deemed to hold the invention and the patent applications 
    and patents pertaining thereto in trust for the Government. The 
    forfeiture provision of this paragraph (m) shall be in addition to 
    and shall not supersede other rights and remedies which the 
    Government may have with respect to subject inventions.
    
    (End of clause)
    
    
    952.227-71  [Removed and Reserved]
    
        11. Section 952.227-71 is removed and reserved.
    
    PART 970--DOE MANAGEMENT AND OPERATING CONTRACTS
    
        12. The authority citation for Part 970 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority. Sec. 161 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 
    2201), sec. 644 of the Department of Energy Organization Act, Pub. 
    L. 95-91 (42 U.S.C. 7254), sec. 201 of the Federal Civilian Employee 
    and Contractor Travel Expenses Act of 1985 (41 U.S.C. 420) and sec. 
    1534 of the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1986, Pub. L. 
    99-145 (42 U.S.C. 7256a), as amended.
    
        13. Revise Section 970.2701 to read as follows:
    
    
    970.2701  General.
    
        This subpart applies to negotiation of patent rights and rights in 
    technical data provisions for the Department of Energy contracts for 
    the management and operation of its research and development and 
    production facilities.
        14. Revise 970.2702 to read as follows:
    
    
    970.2702  Patent rights.
    
        (a) Whenever a contract has as a purpose, the design, construction, 
    or operation of a Government-owned research, development, demonstration 
    or production facility, it is necessary that the Government be accorded 
    certain rights with respect to further use of the facility by or on 
    behalf of the Government upon termination of the contract, including 
    the right to make, use, transfer, or otherwise dispose of all articles, 
    materials, products, or processes embodying inventions or discoveries 
    used or embodied in the facility regardless of whether or not conceived 
    or first actually reduced to practice under or in the course of such a 
    contract. Thus, both versions of the patent rights clause for 
    management and operating contracts contain a facilities license.
        (b) In the case of contractors operating and managing DOE research 
    and development or production facilities, that are not the 
    beneficiaries of Public [[Page 11823]] Law 96-517, the Department is 
    statutorily obligated to take title to inventions conceived or first 
    actually reduced to practice in the performance of the contracts. Here, 
    as in all other circumstances in which the Department takes title to 
    inventions by statute, the contractors may request a waiver at the time 
    of contracting for a class of inventions or during contract performance 
    for identified inventions. DOE includes the considerations at 42 U.S.C. 
    5908 in its determination as to whether to approve the request.
        (c) While no contractor that manages and operates a DOE research 
    and development or production facility is a small business, several 
    have historically been nonprofit organizations. As such, they are the 
    beneficiaries of the Bayh-Dole Act (35 U.S.C. 200 et seq., as amended) 
    and, therefore, receive the right to retain title to inventions 
    conceived or first actually reduced to practice in the performance of 
    their contracts with the Department, except in areas of technology 
    covered by Exceptional Circumstances Determinations made by DOE or of 
    nuclear weapons and naval nuclear propulsion. In these latter two 
    areas, the contractor may request that the Department waive its title 
    and, therefore, subject to the exceptions identified below, may be 
    granted title to inventions conceived or first actually reduced to 
    practice in the performance of its contract with the Department.
        (d) DOE has exercised statutory authority granted under 35 U.S.C. 
    202(a)(ii) and 202(a)(iv). In accordance with 35 U.S.C. 202(a)(ii), DOE 
    has issued several Exceptional Circumstances Determinations pursuant to 
    which DOE nonprofit management and operating contractors have no right 
    to elect title to inventions conceived or first actually reduced to 
    practice in the course of or under their contracts within covered areas 
    of technology. However, those contractors may be given some lesser 
    property right in an invention within limits set by DOE in a particular 
    Exceptional Circumstances Determination so that the contractor can 
    effectively assist with a mission of DOE, such as technology transfer. 
    As new technologies evolve, DOE may issue additional Exceptional 
    Circumstances Determinations, as appropriate.
        (e) In accordance with 35 U.S.C. 202(a)(iv), the Department of 
    Energy has exempted its weapons related and naval nuclear propulsion 
    programs from the broad Bayh-Dole right of its nonprofit management and 
    operating contractors to elect title to inventions conceived or first 
    actually reduced to practice in the course of or under their contracts. 
    The effect of this exemption is that, if the contractors want to 
    acquire title, they must request title to covered inventions. DOE may 
    then grant the request subject to a case-by-case determination that the 
    contractor has met all procedural requirements unilaterally set by DOE 
    to insure that all national security concerns of DOE relating to the 
    contractor's use of an invention in either of these two areas for 
    commercialization have been met.
        15. Section 970.2703 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    970.2703  Technology transfer.
    
        The National Competitiveness Technology Transfer Act of 1989 
    (NCTTA) (Pub. L. 101-189) established technology transfer as a mission 
    for Government-owned, contractor-operated laboratories, including 
    weapons production facilities, and authorizes those laboratories to 
    negotiate and award cooperative research and development agreements 
    with public and private entities for purposes of conducting research 
    and development and transferring technology to the private sector. In 
    implementing the NCTTA, DOE has negotiated technology transfer clauses 
    with the contractors managing and operating its laboratories. Those 
    technology transfer clauses must be read in concert with the patent 
    rights clause required by this subpart. Thus, each management and 
    operating contractor holds title to subject inventions for the benefit 
    of the laboratory or facility being managed and operated by that 
    contractor.
        16. Section 970.2704 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    970.2704  Patent clauses.
    
        (a) Contracting officers shall insert the clause at 970.5204-71 in 
    all management and operating contracts with nonprofit organizations.
        (b) Contracting officers shall insert the clause at 970.5204-72 in 
    all management and operating contracts with profit-making entities.
        17. Add section 970.2705, and section 970.2706, as follows:
    
    
    970.2705  Rights in technical data--general.
    
        (a) A management and operating contractor's obligations for 
    protection of information and data received from DOE and other 
    contractors or subcontractors, and for the contractor's private use of 
    contract data first produced in the performance of the contract, are 
    set forth in paragraph (b)(2) of each Rights in Technical Data clause 
    in 952.227. That subparagraph provides that the contractor may, subject 
    to patent, security, or other provisions of the contract, use for its 
    private purposes, contract data it first produces in the performance of 
    the contract, provided that the contractor has met its data 
    requirements (e.g., delivery of data in the form of progress or status 
    reports specified to be delivered) as of the date of private use of 
    such data. It is not necessary that a ``Final Report'' be submitted in 
    order to privately use data if all required progress and interim 
    reports and other technical data then due have been delivered. 
    Paragraph (b)(2) of each Rights in Technical Data clause in 952.227 
    further provides that technical or other data received by the 
    contractor in the performance of the contract must be held in 
    confidence by the contractor in accordance with restrictions 
    accompanying the data.
        (b) Contractors should be aware that technical information which is 
    reported to DOE by DOE contractors may be disseminated by DOE to 
    others, subject to the restrictions included in the ``Rights to 
    Technical Data'' clause.
        (c) Employees of contractors operating DOE facilities may not be 
    used to assist in the preparation of a proposal or bid for the 
    performance of private commercial services similar or related to those 
    being performed under the DOE contract unless such employee has been 
    separated, with DOE approval, from performance of work under the DOE 
    contract for such period as the Head of the Contracting Activity or 
    designee shall direct consistent with the purpose of this section.
        (d) Contractors operating DOE facilities and performing services as 
    a part of their contract work for other Government agencies or private 
    organizations should not be permitted to utilize information which is 
    furnished by such customers for their own private activities unless it 
    is generally available to others, or unless the customer authorizes 
    such use.
    
    
    970.2706  Rights in technical data--procedures.
    
        (a) General. It is essential that DOE maintain continuity in its 
    programs which are implemented by contracts for the operation of 
    Government-owned facilities. Contract data first produced or 
    specifically used in the performance of such contracts must be 
    considered as integral to and remaining with the facility or plant 
    after termination of such contracts and thus available to DOE and its 
    future contractors for the continued use of the facility or plant. 
    However, it is recognized that these contracts by their nature cannot 
    always be subject to one set of prescribed contract provisions which 
    will always [[Page 11824]] apply. Accordingly, the Rights in Technical 
    Data-Facility clause set forth in 952.227-78 is to be used as a basic 
    or minimal clause which may be modified or expanded with the 
    concurrence of Patent Counsel to meet particular contract situations.
        (b) Whenever a contract has as a purpose the operation of a 
    Government-owned research or production facility, the clause set forth 
    at 952.227-78 shall normally be included in the contract. Inasmuch as 
    this clause secures to the Government ownership, access to, and, if 
    requested, delivery of all technical data first produced in the 
    performance of the contract and access to and delivery of technical 
    data which are specifically used in the performance of the contract, 
    there is no need to include the Additional Technical Data Requirements 
    Clause of 952.227-73.
        (c) Subcontracting. Unless otherwise directed by the contracting 
    officer, the contractor shall be required to follow the policy and 
    procedures of 927.402-1, 927.402-2, and 927.402-3 and shall employ the 
    provisions of the Additional Technical Data Requirements clause of 
    952.227-73 and the Rights in Technical Data (Long Form) clause of 
    952.227-75, where appropriate, except in subcontracts for the design of 
    special production plants or facilities or specially designed equipment 
    for facilities or plants, in which instances contractors shall include 
    the provisions of the Rights in Technical Data--Facility clause of 
    952.227-78.
        (d) Optional clause--Limited rights in proprietary data. In 
    contracts where it is determined that delivery of proprietary data is 
    necessary with limited rights in the Government, the Rights in 
    Technical Data clause of this section shall be supplemented by the 
    additional paragraph (e), set forth in 952.227-79. Paragraph (e) 
    provides that technical data may be specified in the contract as being 
    excluded from the delivery requirements thereof. Alternatively, 
    paragraph (e) may be limited or made applicable to only those classes 
    of proprietary data determined as being necessary for delivery with 
    limited rights. In addition, when furnishing proprietary data with the 
    limited rights legend, paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of 952.227-79 may be 
    modified as follows. When proprietary data is to be furnished only for 
    evaluation, paragraph (a) of the limited rights legend shall be used, 
    and paragraphs (b) and (c), if otherwise inapplicable, may be deleted. 
    When there is a programmatic requirement that proprietary data be 
    disclosed to other DOE contractors only for information or use in 
    connection with work performed under their contracts, paragraph (b) of 
    the limited rights legend shall be used, and paragraphs (a) and (c) may 
    be deleted if otherwise inapplicable. In either of the foregoing 
    examples, the contractor may, if it can show the possibility of a 
    conflict of interest because of disclosure of such data to certain 
    contractors or evaluators, exclude contractors or evaluators from 
    paragraph (a) or (b). If the data is required solely for emergency 
    repair or overhaul, paragraph (c) of the limited rights legend shall be 
    retained, and paragraphs (a) and (b) may, unless otherwise applicable, 
    be deleted. In the event that it is determined that all of the 
    paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of the limited rights legend are to be 
    deleted, the word ``none'' shall be inserted in the legend after the 
    colon (:).
        (e) For contracts involving access to certain categories of DOE-
    owned restricted data, as set forth in 10 CFR Part 725, see 927.402-
    1(h).
        18. Subsection 970.5204-71 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    970.5204-71  Patent Rights--Nonprofit Management and Operating 
    Contractors.
    
        As prescribed at 970.2703, insert the clause at 952.227-11, Patent 
    Rights-Retention by the Contractor (Short Form) with the following 
    changes:
    
    PATENT RIGHTS-NONPROFIT MANAGEMENT AND OPERATING CONTRACTORS (MAR 1995)
    
        1. Replace subparagraph (e)(1) with the following: (e)(1) The 
    contractor may request the right to reserve a revocable, 
    nonexclusive, royalty-free license throughout the world in each 
    subject invention to which the Government obtains title, except if 
    the contractor fails to disclose the invention within the times 
    specified in paragraph (c) of this clause. When DOE approves such 
    reservation, the contractor's license will extend to its domestic 
    subsidiaries and affiliates, if any, within the corporate structure 
    of which the contractor is a party and includes the right to grant 
    sublicenses of the same scope to the extent the contractor was 
    legally obligated to do so at the time the contract was awarded. The 
    license is transferable only with the approval of DOE, except when 
    transferred to the successor of that part of the contractor's 
    business to which the invention pertains.
        2. Add the following paragraphs (m) and (n): (m) Transfer to 
    successor contractor. (1) In the event of termination or expiration 
    of this contract, the contractor shall transfer any unexpended 
    balance of income received relating to intellectual property, in 
    accordance with instructions from the contracting officer, to a 
    successor contractor, or in the absence of a successor contractor, 
    to such other entity as designated by the contracting officer. The 
    contractor shall also transfer title, as one package, in all patents 
    and patent applications, license agreements, accounts containing 
    royalty revenues from such license agreements, including equity 
    positions in third-party entities, and other intellectual property 
    that arose under the performance of this contract, to the successor 
    contractor or to the Government, as directed by the contracting 
    officer.
        (2) The Government agrees that the recipient of such title shall 
    assume any remaining obligations and liabilities in connection with 
    the patents and patent applications.
        (n) Facilities license. In addition to the rights of the parties 
    with respect to inventions or discoveries conceived or first 
    actually reduced to practice in the course of or under this 
    contract, the contractor agrees to and does hereby grant to the 
    Government an irrevocable, nonexclusive, paid-up license in and to 
    any inventions or discoveries regardless of when conceived or 
    actually reduced to practice or acquired by the contractor at any 
    time through completion of this contract and which are incorporated 
    or embodied in the construction of the facility or which are 
    utilized in the operation of the facility or which cover articles, 
    materials, or products manufactured at the facility (1) to practice 
    or have practiced by or for the Government at the facility, and (2) 
    to transfer such license with the transfer of that facility. The 
    acceptance or exercise by the Government of these rights shall not 
    prevent the Government at any time from contesting the 
    enforceability, validity or scope of, or title to, any rights or 
    patents herein licensed.
    
    (End of clause)
    
        19. Subsection 970.5204-72 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    970.5204-72  Patent Rights--Profit-Making Management and Operating 
    Contractors
    
        As prescribed at 970.2703, insert the clause at 952.227-13, Patent 
    Rights-Retention by the Government, with the following changes:
    
    PATENT RIGHTS--PROFIT-MAKING MANAGEMENT AND OPERATING CONTRACTORS (MAR 
    1995)
    
        1. Add the following paragraphs (j) and (k):
        (j) Transfer to successor contractor. (1) In the event of 
    termination or expiration of this contract, the contractor shall 
    transfer any unexpended balance of income received relating to 
    intellectual property, in accordance with instructions from the 
    contracting officer, to a successor contractor, or in the absence of 
    a successor contractor, to such other entity as designated by the 
    contracting officer. The contractor shall also transfer title, as 
    one package, in all patents and patent applications, license 
    agreements, accounts containing royalty revenues from such license 
    agreements, including equity positions in third-party entities, and 
    other intellectual property that arose under the performance of this 
    contract, to the successor contractor or to the Government, as 
    directed by the contracting officer.
        (2) The Government agrees that the recipient of such title shall 
    assume any remaining obligations and liabilities in connection with 
    the patents and patent applications.
        (k) Facilities License. In addition to the rights of the parties 
    with respect to [[Page 11825]] inventions or discoveries conceived 
    or first actually reduced to practice in the course of or under this 
    contract, the contractor agrees to and does hereby grant to the 
    Government an irrevocable, nonexclusive, paid-up license in and to 
    any inventions or discoveries regardless of when conceived or 
    actually reduced to practice or acquired by the contractor at any 
    time through completion of this contract and which are incorporated 
    or embodied in the construction of the facility or which are 
    utilized in the operation of the facility or which cover articles, 
    materials, or products manufactured at the facility (1) to practice 
    or have practiced by or for the Government at the facility, and (2) 
    to transfer such license with the transfer of that facility. The 
    acceptance or exercise by the Government of these rights shall not 
    prevent the Government at any time from contesting the 
    enforceability, validity or scope of, or title to, any rights or 
    patents herein licensed.
    
    (End of clause)
    
    [FR Doc. 95-4611 Filed 3-1-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6450-01-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
4/3/1995
Published:
03/02/1995
Department:
Energy Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
95-4611
Dates:
April 3, 1995.
Pages:
11812-11825 (14 pages)
RINs:
1991-AA23
PDF File:
95-4611.pdf
CFR: (12)
48 CFR 927.200
48 CFR 927.201
48 CFR 927.206
48 CFR 927.207
48 CFR 927.300
More ...