Exec Order 12591 Facilitating Science

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Exec Order 12591 Facilitating Science

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Executive Order 12591--Facilitating access to science and technology
Source: The provisions of Executive Order 12591 of Apr. 10, 1987, appear at 52 FR 13414, 3 CFR, 1987
Comp., p. 220, unless otherwise noted.
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and laws of the United States of America,
including the Federal Technology Transfer Act of 1986 (Public Law 99-502), the Trademark Clarification
Act of 1984 (Public Law 98-620), and the University and Small Business Patent Procedure Act of 1980
(Public Law 96-517), and in order to ensure that Federal agencies and laboratories assist universities and
the private sector in broadening our technology base by moving new knowledge from the research
laboratory into the development of new products and processes, it is hereby ordered as follows:
Section 1. Transfer of Federally Funded Technology.(a) The head of each Executive department and
agency, to the extent permitted by law, shall encourage and facilitate collaboration among Federal
laboratories, State and local governments, universities, and the private sector, particularly small
business, in order to assist in the transfer of technology to the marketplace.(b) The head of each
Executive department and agency shall, within overall funding allocations and to the extent permitted
by law:(1) delegate authority to its government-owned, government-operated Federal laboratories:(A)
to enter into cooperative research and development agreements with other Federal laboratories, State
and local governments, universities, and the private sector; and(B) to license, assign, or waive rights to
intellectual property developed by the laboratory either under such cooperative research or
development agreements and from within individual laboratories.(2) identify and encourage persons to
act as conduits between and among Federal laboratories, universities, and the private sector for the
transfer of technology developed from federally funded research and development efforts;(3) ensure
that State and local governments, universities, and the private sector are provided with information on
the technology, expertise, and facilities available in Federal laboratories;(4) promote the
commercialization, in accord with my Memorandum to the Heads of Executive Departments and
Agencies of February 18, 1983, of patentable results of federally funded research by granting to all
contractors, regardless of size, the title to patents made in whole or in part with Federal funds, in
exchange for royalty-free use by or on behalf of the government;(5) administer all patents and licenses
to inventions made with federal assistance, which are owned by the non-profit contractor or grantee, in
accordance with Section 202(c)(7) of Title 35 of the United States Code as amended by Public Law 98620, without regard to limitations on licensing found in that section prior to amendment or in
Institutional Patent Agreements now in effect that were entered into before that law was enacted on
November 8, 1984, unless, in the case of an invention that has not been marketed, the funding agency
determines, based on information in its files, that the contractor or grantee has not taken adequate
steps to market the inventions, in accordance with applicable law or an Institutional Patent
Agreement;(6) implement, as expeditiously as practicable, royalty-sharing programs with inventors who
were employees of the agency at the time their inventions were made, and cash award programs;
and(7) cooperate, under policy guidance provided by the Office of Federal Procurement Policy, with the
heads of other affected departments and agencies in the development of a uniform policy permitting
Federal contractors to retain rights to software, engineering drawings, and other technical data
generated by Federal grants and contracts, in exchange for royalty-free use by or on behalf of the
government.
[Sec. 1 amended by Executive Order 12618 of Dec. 22, 1987, 52 FR 48661, 3 CFR, 1987 Comp., p. 262]

Sec. 2. Establishment of the Technology Share Program. The Secretaries of Agriculture, Commerce,
Energy, and Health and Human Services and the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration shall select one or more of their Federal laboratories to participate in the Technology
Share Program. Consistent with its mission and policies and within its overall funding allocation in any
year, each Federal laboratory so selected shall:
(a) Identify areas of research and technology of potential importance to long-term national economic
competitiveness and in which the laboratory possesses special competence and/or unique facilities;
(b) Establish a mechanism through which the laboratory performs research in areas identified in Section
2(a) as a participant of a consortium composed of United States industries and universities. All consortia
so established shall have, at a minimum, three individual companies that conduct the majority of their
business in the United States; and
(c) Limit its participation in any consortium so established to the use of laboratory personnel and
facilities. However, each laboratory may also provide financial support generally not to exceed 25
percent of the total budget for the activities of the consortium. Such financial support by any laboratory
in all such consortia shall be limited to a maximum of $5 million per annum.

Sec. 3. Technology Exchange--Scientists and Engineers. The Executive Director of the President's
Commission on Executive Exchange shall assist Federal agencies, where appropriate, by developing and
implementing an exchange program whereby scientists and engineers in the private sector may take
temporary assignments in Federal laboratories, and scientists and engineers in Federal laboratories may
take temporary assignments in the private sector.
Sec. 4. International Science and Technology. In order to ensure that the United States benefits from
and fully exploits scientific research and technology developed abroad,(a) The head of each Executive
department and agency, when negotiating or entering into cooperative research and development
agreements and licensing arrangements with foreign persons or industrial organizations (where these
entities are directly or indirectly controlled by a foreign company or government), shall, in consultation
with the United States Trade Representative, give appropriate consideration:(1) to whether such foreign
companies or governments permit and encourage United States agencies, organizations, or persons to
enter into cooperative research and development agreements and licensing arrangements on a
comparable basis;(2) to whether those foreign governments have policies to protect the United States
intellectual property rights; and(3) where cooperative research will involve data, technologies, or
products subject to national security export controls under the laws of the United States, to whether
those foreign governments have adopted adequate measures to prevent the transfer of strategic
technology to destinations prohibited under such national security export controls, either through
participation in the Coordinating Committee for Multilateral Export Controls (COCOM) or through other
international agreements to which the United States and such foreign governments are signatories.(b)
The Secretary of State shall develop a recruitment policy that encourages scientists and engineers from
other Federal agencies, academic institutions, and industry to apply for assignments in embassies of the
United States; and(c) The Secretaries of State and Commerce and the Director of the National Science

Foundation shall develop a central mechanism for the prompt and efficient dissemination of science and
technology information developed abroad to users in Federal laboratories, academic institutions, and
the private sector on a fee-for-service basis.
Sec. 5. Technology Transfer from the Department of Defense. Within 6 months of the date of this Order,
the Secretary of Defense shall identify a list of funded technologies that would be potentially useful to
United States industries and universities. The Secretary shall then accelerate efforts to make these
technologies more readily available to United States industries and universities.

Sec. 6. Basic Science and Technology Centers. The head of each Executive department and agency shall
examine the potential for including the establishment of university research centers in engineering,
science, or technology in the strategy and planning for any future research and development programs.
Such university centers shall be jointly funded by the Federal Government, the private sector, and,
where appropriate, the States and shall focus on areas of fundamental research and technology that are
both scientifically promising and have the potential to contribute to the Nation's long-term economic
competitiveness.
Sec. 7. Reporting Requirements. (a) Within 1 year from the date of this Order, the Director of the Office
of Science and Technology Policy shall convene an interagency task force comprised of the heads of
representative agencies and the directors of representative Federal laboratories, or their designees, in
order to identify and disseminate creative approaches to technology transfer from Federal laboratories.
The task force will report to the President on the progress of and problems with technology transfer
from Federal laboratories.(b) Specifically, the report shall include:(1) a listing of current technology
transfer programs and an assessment of the effectiveness of these programs;(2) identification of new or
creative approaches to technology transfer that might serve as model programs for Federal
laboratories;(3) criteria to assess the effectiveness and impact on the Nation's economy of planned or
future technology transfer efforts; and(4) a compilation and assessment of the Technology Share
Program established in Section 2 and, where appropriate, related cooperative research and
development venture programs.
Sec. 8. Relation to Existing Law. Nothing in this Order shall affect the continued applicability of any
existing laws or regulations relating to the transfer of United States technology to other nations. The
head of any Executive department or agency may exclude from consideration, under this Order, any
technology that would be, if transferred, detrimental to the interests of national security.


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