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John M. Golden & Hannah J. Wiseman For the conference onInnovation Law Beyond IPat Yale Law School
The early twenty-first century has witnessed a revolution in
oil and gas development that promises to turn the United States into a new form
of “petrostate,”
a high-tech superpower whose newfound ability to exploit previously unexploited
or unexploitable energy resources could shake national economies and geopolitical calculi for
decades. This revolution
represents the sort of disruptive innovation that makes innovation-policy
mavens salivate. What public
policies, if any, helped bring about this revolution, and how can the story
behind it inform innovation policy going forward? These are questions that we explore in a draft paper, “The
Fracking Revolution: A Case Study
in Policy Levers to Promote Innovation” (draft available by request), that we
will present at the “Innovation Law
Beyond IP” conference to be hosted by the Yale Law School Information
Society Project later this month.
Credit for the U.S. boom in unconventional natural gas
production commonly focuses on an enterprising individual, George Mitchell, who
persisted in seeking to “crack the code” of Texas’ Barnett Shale for more than
a decade before making key breakthroughs with hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”)
in the late 1990s. Notably,
Mitchell and his independent production company achieved this success without obtaining
patent protection in their critical discoveries. Thus, the facial story of the fracking revolution can seem
one of a heroic individual entrepreneur largely unaided even by the sort of
minimalist government intervention embodied by the U.S. patent system.
Although Mitchell and the entrepreneurial spirit he represents
deserve great credit, the overall story of the shale gas boom is more
complicated. Infrastructural developments and a large
number of technological innovations—not only in hydraulic fracturing and
horizontal drilling, but also in new forms of drill bits, downhole motors and
measurements, seismic imaging, and flexible tubing—combined to provide vital
foundations for the boom. The
resulting, more complex backstory features multiple significant roles for government
action. Through government-funded R&D, tax and regulatory relief,
and a FERC-sanctioned surcharge on interstate gas that financed the private Gas
Research Institute, federal and state governments provided substantial—at times
critical—support for an unconventional gas industry that was historically
dominated by independent companies with limited R&D budgets. The federal government also paved the way for an
independent-producer-led boom by requiring, encouraging, or otherwise enabling
“open access” interstate pipelines and lucrative interstate markets for the
transport and sale of unconventional gas.
Somewhat ironically in light of Edmund Kitch’s analogy to
resource-extraction rights as a basis for his “prospect
theory” for patents, patents appear to have played an only relatively
modest, background role in the story behind the shale gas boom. There is a decades-long history of
patenting in a number of the technologies that ultimately converged to produce
the boom. But it appears true that
Mitchell and his production company did not pursue patents on their key innovations. Indeed, as chronicled by Zhongmin Wang and Alan
Krupnick , Mitchell and other independent producers apparently relied
primarily on other forms of property rights—land leases and mineral rights
themselves—to appropriate value from their innovations. Once such a producer assembled the
right mix of technologies to “crack the code” for a particular shale formation,
its already purchased land and mineral rights would shoot up in value, a
phenomenon that enabled Mitchell Energy & Development to sell itself for
$3.5 billion in 2002. Thus, the
story of the fracking revolution is in substantial part a story of how complementary assets can substitute for strong patent rights as
a means for promoting technological progress.
Of course, one can wonder whether a goal of technological
progress has been pursued with too much zeal. Current environmental concerns with fracking—some relating
directly to regulatory exemptions that helped speed fracking’s development and
diffusion, others relating to worry that unconventional gas development has
diverted effort from renewable energies—emphasize this point.
But assuming a goal of promoting development of a particular technology,
the story of the fracking revolution provides a number of lessons that can
inform policies in other areas, such as those involving solar or wind
energy. These lessons,
having been derived from a single case study, cannot be expected to be in the
nature of definitive, universal truths about the precise levers that best
foster innovation. But the lessons
do include reaffirmations of government’s capacity to use—and potential wisdom
in using—a diverse mix of policies to support productive innovation ecosystems:
policies that nurture needed infrastructure, that promote information sharing, that
supplement and complement private research, and that increase the prospective
profitability of innovation through intellectual property, tax, regulatory, or even
traditional tangible-property mechanisms.
The relatively modest role of patents in the story behind the shale gas
boom suggests that, under appropriate circumstances, a mix of alternative
policy levers can substitute for the benefits often thought to be supplied by
patents. Consistent with the calls ofotherauthors to consider how and to what extent policymakers should seek to promote innovation, we hope our study can inform the use of such policy
levers in the future.
John M. Golden is the Loomer Family Professor in Law at UT Austin. He can be reached at jgolden at law.texas.edu
Hannah J. Wiseman is an assistant professor of law at Florida State. She can be reached at hwiseman at law.fsu.edu