Patent Office Publishes A New List of Scientific Advisors After 9 Years

by Pankhuri Agarwal and Bhavik Shukla

October 3, 2019

The Patent Office released a list of newly enrolled/ retained scientific advisors last month. A total of 37 advisors have been included in the list, out of which 22 scientific advisors have been retained from the previous list published in 2010.

Section 115 of the Patents Act, 1970 (‘Act’) grants a court (hearing matters under the Act) the power to appoint independent scientific advisors to assist courts in any proceedings, or report upon any questions of fact or opinion (not involving a question of interpretation of law). The Patent Office is required to maintain a roll of such advisors and update it annually under Rule 103(1) of the Patent Rules, 2003 (‘Rules’). The eligibility requirements for appointment of such advisors are stipulated under Rule 103(2).

The Patent Office had invited applications for enrolment or continuation as a scientific advisor in February last year. For new enrolment, the application form required the applicants to fill in their contact details, educational qualifications, professional experience and research experience (if any) and also mention if they are working with any S & T department of the Goverment. The declaration for retention as a scientific advisor merely required the present advisor to furnish an updated biodata, if any. The list of selected advisors was published early last month. The list contains names of 37 advisors, 15 newly enrolled and 22 retained from the 2010 list. The following are the number of advisors appointed across four groups in comparison with the list published in 2010:

Sr. No.Group20102019
1.Chemistry and Allied Sciences1315
2.Biotechnology and Microbiology78
3.Mechanical and Allied Subjects74
4.Electrical, Electronics and Related Subjects710
Total3437

Inclusion of Patent Agents as Advisors and Failure to Specify the Same

In an earlier post, Prashant had expressed concern over the inclusion of some Patent Agents in the list of scientific advisors. He had noted that “[a]lthough there is no statutory bar against ‘patent agents’ being empanelled, one would think that there might be a conflict of interest for them to appear on such a list.” In a welcome move, this time the Patent Office has limited the number of Patent Agents to just 2 in contrast to around 6 in the 2010 list. Interestingly however, neither the new list nor the previous one specify if a particular advisor is a Patent Agent. Isn’t this a violation of Rule 103(1) which requires the roll of scientific advisors to include their designations and their technical and practical experience?