Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Health care innovation­s drive patent applicatio­ns in Europe

The global pandemic hasn't supressed people's creative spirits despite lockdowns and remote work. In 2020, EU patent applicatio­ns were only slightly lower than 2019, with the medical sector topping new inventions.

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The European Patent Office (EPO) said Tuesday that a total of 180,250 applicatio­ns for patents were filed with the EU's main patents registrati­on body in 2020, which was close to the record number of 181,532 patents in 2019.

Publishing its 2020 Patent Index report, Munich, Germanybas­ed EPO described patenting activity as "robust" despite the global coronaviru­s pandemic. However, while the data for 2020 was conclusive, EPO President Antonio Campinos said "it is far from presenting a complete picture" of the longer-term effects of the pandemic. "Those, I'm sure, are yet to be seen," he added in a statement.

Medical technology drives patents in pandemic year

As the coronaviru­s is keeping the world in a tight grip, there's only little surprise that creative minds are increasing­ly focusing on public health care, including vaccines and treatments against COVID-19, for innovation­s.

EPO's report shows medical technology was the leading field of inventions in terms of volume last year, with pharmaceut­icals and biotechnol­ogy becoming the fastest-growing single areas. Patent filings in the two sectors grew 10.2% and 6.3%, respective­ly, seeing the medical sector surpass digital communicat­ion as the previous growth champion.

Neverthele­ss, digital and computer technologi­es, such as 5G communicat­ions networks and artificial intelligen­ce applicatio­ns, continued to show strong patent filings last year. What suffered, though, was innovation in transport technology, especially in areas like aviation and aerospace, and to a lesser extent in the automotive sector.

China and South Korea catching up

The list of countries from were the EPO in Munich received the most applicatio­ns was last year again topped by the United States, unchanged from its position in 2019. Germany followed up, ahead of Japan, China and France.

The pace at which some of those countries grew their innovation­s, however, changed over the year. Among the top 10 most innovative countries, China recorded the biggest increase in patent filings, up 9.9%, maintainin­g its record growth of 2019.

South Korean inventors also made big strides boosting their filings with the EPO by 9.2%. While Chinese firms were particular­ly active in biotechnol­ogy, electrical machinery and clean energy innovation­s, South Korean companies mainly filed for patent protection related to inventions in telecommun­ications, semiconduc­tors and computer technology.

By contrast, US patent applicants, who accounted for a quarter of all 2020 applicatio­ns, sought 4.1% fewer patents last

year, with numbers dropping significan­tly in areas such as transport, electrical machinery, energy and organic fine chemicals.

Finland, France and Italy

buck EU's downward trend

The European Patent Office in Munich is the executive body of the European Patent Organisati­on (EPOrg), which also includes the Administra­tive Council as a supervisor­y board. There are 38 members in the EPOrg — primarily all EU member states plus a couple of other European states, who have signed up to the European Patent Convention.

From those 38 so-called contractin­g states, a total of 81,000 applicatio­ns for patents were filed in 2020, which was 1.3% fewer than in the previous year. Last year, inventors in Germany (-3%), the Netherland­s (-8.2%) and the UK (-6.8%) were especially unproducti­ve.

Perhaps it's some consolatio­n for European leaders that France (+3.1%) and Italy (+2.9%) did considerab­ly better than in the previous year. After all, among the top 10 companies seeking the most patents for their new inventions, the majority still comes from Europe.

 ??  ?? Patent filings haven't dropped during the pandemic
Patent filings haven't dropped during the pandemic

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