Singaporean poised to lead UN patent body

Ipos chief Daren Tang nominated to head World Intellectual Property Organisation

Ipos' chief executive Daren Tang was selected by Wipo's coordination committee from a slate that originally had 10 candidates. He has to be confirmed by the body's general assembly in May. PHOTO: EDWIN TONG/FACEBOOK
Ipos' chief executive Daren Tang was selected by Wipo's coordination committee from a slate that originally had 10 candidates. He has to be confirmed by the body's general assembly in May. PHOTO: EDWIN TONG/FACEBOOK

Singapore's intellectual property chief is poised to head the global patent office, after becoming the first Singaporean to be nominated to helm a United Nations agency.

Mr Daren Tang, 47, yesterday received the nomination to become the next director-general of the Geneva-based World Intellectual Property Organisation (Wipo), which shapes global rules for intellectual property and oversees patents.

He was selected by the agency's 83-member coordination committee from a slate which originally comprised 10 candidates. In the final round of voting last night, he garnered 55 votes against China's candidate, lawyer Wang Binying, who received 28 votes.

The nomination of Mr Tang, who is chief executive of the Intellectual Property Office of Singapore (Ipos), will have to be confirmed by the Wipo General Assembly when it convenes on May 7 and 8.

Wipo's General Assembly has the final say, and has never rejected a committee nominee since the agency was created in 1967.

If confirmed, Mr Tang will be the fifth director-general of Wipo, succeeding Australian Francis Gurry, and the first Singaporean to assume a top role in a UN organisation. He would then begin his six-year term from Oct 1.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong congratulated Mr Tang on his nomination last night.

PM Lee said in a Facebook post: "Am grateful the Wipo Coordination Committee supported Daren. We look forward to Wipo's General Assembly approving Daren's appointment as Director General in May 2020."

He added: "This was a team effort by officers in Ipos, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Law, Ministry of Trade and Industry, all our overseas missions, non-resident Ambassadors and special envoys. Well done for flying the Singapore flag high!"

Mr Tang said he was humbled and honoured by the nomination .

He noted in a statement issued by MinLaw and Ipos that the nomination process was a team effort across many government agencies, all of which worked hard over many months to promote his candidature.

"There were many well-qualified candidates who contested through a fair, open and transparent process, and this shows how important Wipo is to the global community," Mr Tang said.

"I look forward to the confirmation of the nomination by the Wipo General Assembly in May 2020, and to jointly write the next chapter of Wipo's future."

Senior Minister of State for Law Edwin Tong said Singapore is "very grateful for the strong show of support from the Wipo Coordination Committee".

Mr Tong noted that Wipo's support when Singapore was still a young country, in its formative years, had enabled the Republic to develop a strong intellectual property (IP) regime.

"I am confident that, if approved by the Wipo General Assembly in May, Daren will serve Wipo's interests well, connecting countries and regions across the world," he said.

As chief executive of Ipos, Mr Tang drove the strategic transformation of the agency from an IP registry and regulator into an innovation agency that helps build Singapore's future economy, the statement said.

His term also saw major updates to Singapore's IP Hub Masterplan, legislative and policy reforms to the IP regime and a scaling up of international engagement.

Ipos today has cooperation agreements with more than 70 regional and international partners.

Mr Tang had also served as chairman to Wipo's Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights since May 2017, and was re-elected for a second term last year.

Before joining Ipos, Mr Tang was the lead negotiator and legal counsel for Singapore in the IP chapters of several important free-trade agreements, and was part of Singapore's legal team in the dispute with Malaysia over Pedra Branca, which was argued before the International Court of Justice.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on March 05, 2020, with the headline Singaporean poised to lead UN patent body. Subscribe