China’s patent office now the world’s biggest, UN innovation report finds

2012/12/25

China registered the most patent applications globally last year, leading the world in an indicator that the United Nations intellectual property (IP) agency uses to measure innovation.

China received 526,412 applications compared to 503,582 for the United States and 342,610 for Japan, according to the latest report from the Geneva-based World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO).

The report, World Intellectual Property Indicators 2012, also said that global patent filings passed the two-million mark for the first time – despite the sluggish global economy.

“Sustained growth in IP filings indicates that companies continue to innovate despite weak economic conditions,” said WIPO’s Director General, Francis Gurry. “This is good news, as it lays the foundation for the world economy to generate growth and prosperity in the future.”

As part of its mandate to encourage IP in order to stimulate creativity, WIPO monitors global registration of patents, copyright, trademarks, designs and utility models (UMs) – the latter being instruments that protect inventions for a limited period of time.

Ahead of 2011, China had already been the world’s largest processor of UMs, WIPO reported.

In the report, the UN agency notes that China’s State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO) became the “largest patent office in the world” after overtaking the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) in 2011 and the Japan Patent Office (JPO) in 2010.

Only Germany, Japan and the United States had held the top spot during the 100 years before 2011, with China accounting for 72 per cent of the almost 294,000 increase in patent filings worldwide between 2009 and 2011“Even though caution is required in directly comparing IP filing figures across countries, these trends nevertheless reflect how the geography of innovation has shifted,” Mr. Gurry said in the WIPO report’s foreword.

According to the report, patent filings worldwide grew by 7.8 per cent in 2011, exceeding seven per cent growth for the second year in a row, after a 3.6 per cent decline in 2009 in the wake of the global financial crisis.

Similarly, UM, industrial design and trademark filings increased by 35 per cent, 16 per cent and 13.3 per cent, respectively, said the agency.

Worldwide, patents for digital communication and renewable energy technologies represented the highest filing increases from 2006 to 2010, the report showed. WIPO also said that computer technology patents accounted for the largest overall number, while filings for pharmaceuticals have declined since 2007.

“Residents of Japan filed the largest number of applications relating to solar energy and fuel cell technologies, while residents of Germany and the US accounted for the largest numbers of applications relating to geothermal and wind energy, respectively,” WIPO said.

In contrast to growth in patent filings in most of the top 20 countries, WIPO highlighted that results for middle- and low-income countries were mixed. Illustrating this, WIPO cited growth in the offices of Algeria (11.3%), Madagascar (41.9%) and Saudi Arabia (6.3%), and declines in Guatemala (-13.1%), Jamaica (-27.6%) and Jordan (-15.6%).

The report said that a record 4.2 million trademark applications were filed worldwide in 2011, largely due to “rapid growth in filings in China” in recent years.

Industrial design applications worldwide also grew strongly over the last two years, increasing by 16 per cent in 2011 after a 13.9 per cent increase in 2010, the report said, adding that growth in China was again the key driver.

World Intellectual Property Indicators 2012 also highlighted applications for the protection of new varieties of plants, saying they grew by 7.8 per cent in 2011, with some 60 per cent of the applications occurring in Israel and the European Union.

(Source:UN News Centre)