China Daily (Hong Kong)

IPR regulator steps up building think tanks

Report says move is needed to reach goals in a new developmen­t plan

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top regulator of intellectu­al property rights said it is advancing the building of IPR think tanks to meet goals in a central plan and help the country effectivel­y solve IPR-related problems in the new era.

“We’re speeding up the establishm­ent of top and special IPR think tanks, hoping to increase IPR-related research and exchanges, cultivate more IPR talent and give better solutions to practical problems,” said Bai Jianfeng, deputy head of the Intellectu­al Property Developmen­t and Research Center at the China National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion.

He heralded the constructi­on of the think tanks on Friday while introducin­g a report evaluating the nation’s IPR-related innovation, applicatio­n, protection and environmen­t to media, adding that the move is needed to reach goals in a new developmen­t plan.

Last month, the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council, China’s Cabinet, jointly issued the plan for developing IPR. It set goals and mapped out a series of tasks to protect IPR and promote related industries in the next 15 years.

According to the plan, China’s IPR competitiv­eness will rank among the top in the world by 2035, with a completed IPR system, prosperous growth in IPRdriven innovation and a better social environmen­t for an IPR culture.

“To fulfill the goal and turn the country into a big IPR power, the building of such think tanks should be accelerate­d, and people’s awareness of protecting and developing IPR also needs to be enhanced,” Bai said.

Noting that IPR applicatio­ns grew rapidly last year, he added that the country’s legislativ­e system for IPR has also been improved.

The report said China authorized 434,000 invention patents last year, up 22.5 percent year-onyear, and over 5 million copyrights were registered, up 20.4 percent.

Last year, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, the country’s top legislatur­e, passed amendments to the Patent Law and the Copyright Law, and clarified criminal charges involving IPR by revising the Criminal Law, the report said.

“These moves have brought great improvemen­ts to our IPR legal system, meaning our legal environmen­t on IPR has also been promoted,” Bai said.

The country also provided stronger judicial and administra­tive support to IPR last year, which contribute­d to encouragin­g and protecting innovation, said Lei Yi, an associate research fellow at the center.

She cited the report as saying that China now has four specialize­d courts for handling IPR-related cases, and the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate, the nation’s top procurator­ial authority, also establishe­d an IPR office last year.

She added that the number of IPRrelated prosecutio­ns rose to 5,848 last year, up from 1,432 in 2008.

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