India’s Patent Landscape: Universities as Changemakers

Context:

India is transitioning from being a consumer of global technology to becoming a creator, with patent filings from Indian entities surpassing foreign ones in 2023. Universities and educational institutions are emerging as key drivers in this transformation.


Current Scenario of Patents in India

  • Rising share of domestic filings:

    • In 2023, Indian applicants accounted for 57% of all patent filings.

    • India has overtaken the U.S. as the second-largest recipient of patents (2021).

  • Changing sectors:

    • Computer science patents rose from 1.27% (2000) to 26.5% (2023).

    • Biomedical patents increased from 0.6% to 10%.

    • Mechanical/chemical still strong but relatively declining.

  • Processing improvements:

    • Early 2000s: 8–10 years for a patent grant.

    • 2020s: many cleared in 2–3 years; some granted within the same year.


Role of Universities & Research Institutions

  • Rising share of filings:

    • 2023: 43% of filings from educational institutions (vs. <20% in 2000).

    • IITs leading: IIT Madras (300 patents in 2023), IIT Bombay (421 in 2023–24).

  • Institutional mechanisms:

    • IP cells, legal support units for patent filing, tech transfer, monetisation.

    • KAPILA (2020): IP literacy in higher education.

    • Atal Innovation Mission (2016): fostering problem-solving & entrepreneurship.

  • Recognition & incentives:

    • Patent awards from government & industry encourage innovation.


Challenges

  • Funding deficit: R&D expenditure at 0.67% of GDP (vs. U.S. 3.5%, China 2.5%).

  • Pending applications: 80% of recent patents still awaiting decision.

  • Commercialisation gap: Weak linkage between patents and market adoption.

  • Resource constraints: Universities often struggle with infrastructure and funding.


Way Forward

  1. Increase R&D spending to at least 2% of GDP.

  2. Strengthen IP ecosystem: faster clearances, better examiner capacity, global harmonisation.

  3. Encourage academia-industry linkages for technology transfer and monetisation.

  4. Support startups & MSMEs with IP facilitation and financial backing.

  5. International collaboration in patent research and joint technology development.


Conclusion

India’s growing patent ecosystem, driven by universities, startups, and individuals, signals a shift towards becoming a global innovation hub. However, to sustain momentum, India must address funding gaps, improve IP-commercialisation linkages, and institutionalise support mechanisms. With focused investment and strategic reforms, universities can become the true changemakers in India’s journey from “Make in India” to “Invent in India.”

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