7 October 2022
Innovate Local West Yorkshire
5 September 2022
York Minster Centre of Excellence for Heritage Craft Skills
Author MatzeTrier Licence CC BY-SA 3.0 Source Wikimedia Commons |
The fire at Notre Dame, the Christchurch earthquake and the 1984 fire at York Minster are reminders of the fragility and vulnerability of the world's cathedrals. The skills of the craftsmen who erected and decorated those places of worship are as much in demand at present as they were when those buildings were constructed.
An initiative to keep those skills alive is The Centre of Excellence for Heritage Craft Skills and Estate Management which will establish a campus for research, education and training in stonemasonry, glass painting and setting, joinery and other traditional skills. The Centre of Excellence will comprise a Heritage Quad and a Works and Technology Hub. The Minster has published a video on Youtube which offers a virtual tour of the campus. According to Miran Rahman, the City Council has now approved plans for the new construction (see York Minster Centre of Excellence plans win approval 2 Sept 2022 TheBusinessDesk).
None of the announcements in the press or on the Minster's website mentions intellectual property but at least some of the works of the craftsmen and women at the Centre of Excellence are likely to generate or be capable of generating substantial. Most of the works will be works of artistic craftsmanship within the meaning of s.4 (1) (c) of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. The Centre and Quad are likely to acquire goodwill which can best be protected by trade mark registration. There will be plenty of trade secrets and possibly even some inventions at the Works and Technology Hub.
Like most research and teaching institutions the Centre is likely to develop an IP policy if it has not already done so. In many cases, the works of those craftsmen and women will belong to their employers but in some instances, it will be theirs to exploit. Happily, there are a lot of patent and trade mark agencies and specialist IP lawyers in York. There is also an IP clinic at Leeds Central Library.
Anyone wishing to discuss this article may call me on 020 7404 5252 during office hours or send me a message through my contact form.
8 May 2022
Opportunities for Yorkshire Business in Space
Photo Alan Saunders Licence CC BY 2,0 Source Wikimedia Commons |
The above photograph shows the space suit worn by Helen Sharman, the first British astronaut I mention her because this is an article about opportunities for Yorkshire business in space. Sharman is a Yorkshire woman, born and educated in Sheffield, who seized her opportunity to go into space with both hands.
On Wednesday, 11 May 2022 the Leeds City Region Supply Chaim Programme and Space Hub Yorkshire will hold what they describe as "an event" at the 3M Buckley Innovation Centre in Huddersfield on Opportunities for Manufacturers in the Space Sector - How To Guide, According to the Eventbrite card,
"[the] event will comprise of a number of engaging talks giving an academic, business and legal focus on how you can grasp these opportunities, as well as a case study of a business that is already working successfully in the space sector. There will also be several exhibitors from partner organisations who will be on hand should you wish to have a chat with them."
The event (which is free) will start at 09:15 and end at 13:00.
The reason I mention that event is that the space industry is one of the few sectors of the British economy that are likely to grow over the next few years notwithstanding Brexit, covid, inflation and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. That is because world demand for space related products and services is growing. As I said in Commercial Exploitation of Space: Space Industry Act 2018 (10 April 2018 NIPC Law):
"The value of the global space market is between £155 and £190 billion and likely to rise to £400 billion by 2030 according to the Space Sector Report 1 which was prepared for the House of Commons Committee on Exiting the European Union. The Industrial Strategy white paper states that the United Kingdom has about 6.5% of that market and that the government hopes to increase that share to 10% by 2030."
According to the HM Government's National Space Strategy which was published last September, these figures remain on track.
One of the reasons why the government expects the British share of the space market to grow rapidly is that the United Kingdom is developing a satellite launch capability as I noted in Space Industry - Licensing Spaceports on 11 April 2018 in NIPC Law. So far, the government has licensed space ports in Scotland, Cornwall and North Wales. The nearest to this region is Spaceport Snowdonia at Llanbedr near Harlech which I discussed in It is about Rocket Science on 21 April 2022 and The Space Industry in Wales on 27 Dec 2021 in NIPC Wales.
The expansion of the UK space industry will give rise to many issues over contracts, funding, liability for damage to property on earth and in space from debris and my own speciality intellectual property. I discussed some of those issues in The Role of Intellectual Property in Space Commerce on 19 July 2019 in NIPC Cornwall. I have been following those issues since the early 1980s.
Anyone wishing to discuss this article or the legal issues relating to space in general is welcome to call me on 020 7404 5252 during office hours or send me a message through my contact form.