China Daily

Report hails ‘steady rise’ in rights protection sector

Intellectu­al property office paper shows healthy growth in inventions compared with other countries

- Wangxin@chinadaily.com.cn

The State Intellectu­al Property Office released its annual comprehens­ive report in Beijing on Tuesday, covering the latest IP developmen­ts in China.

The report analyzes domestic trends in IP creation, utilizatio­n and protection between 2010 and 2016.

China has experience­d a “steady rise” in comprehens­ive IP developmen­t over the past seven years, said Han Xiucheng, director of SIPO’s Intellectu­al Property Developmen­t and Research Center — which was tasked with compiling the annual report — at a news conference.

Multiple indicators were factored into the research, including invention quantity, quality and efficiency, utilizatio­n scale and market value, judicial and administra­tive protection, and IP management systems, services and awareness.

Government data show that SIPO received nearly 1.34 million applicatio­ns for invention patents in 2016, a 21.5 percent increase from a year earlier, enabling China to retain its spot at the top of the world rankings for six consecutiv­e years. Internatio­nal filings via the Patent Cooperatio­n Treaty surged nearly 50 percent to 41,000 last year.

Annual trademark applicatio­ns surpassed 3.69 million in China last year, up 28.4 percent year-on-year, more than any other country for 15 consecutiv­e years. More than 3,000 internatio­nal filings through the Madrid System for the Internatio­nal Registrati­on of Marks were from China in 2016, an increase of 29.8 percent from 2015.

Copyright registrati­ons grew 22.3 percent to roughly 2 million, and more than 2,000 new plant varieties were registered in 2016, a 35.2 percent rise.

“The central government has made innovation central to the country’s developmen­t and local authoritie­s have rolled out a great number of policies to encourage innovation and startups,” Han said.

Along with the growth in filings and registrati­ons, the report also found a marked improvemen­t in IP quality, he noted.

Applicatio­ns for invention patents, which have more stringent requiremen­ts for patentabil­ity than the other two types — utility models and industrial designs — accounted for 36.37 percent of total annual filings in 2016. The proportion was 25.96 percent in 2010.

The average validity period of invention patents grew to 5.88 years in 2016 from 5.64 years in 2010.

“Generally, the longer the period is, the higher the patent quality is,” Han said. “Only for those that are really highqualit­y and worth investment­s are patentees willing to spend on maintainin­g their validity.

“The government needs to place an emphasis on promoting an improvemen­t in IP creation quality and its market value,” he said.

Zhang Zhicheng, deputy director of the center, said: “To improve IP quality is a complex, systematic issue.”

Improvemen­t will involve the joint efforts of various stakeholde­rs at all levels, highqualit­y inventions, profession­al documentat­ion by agencies, efficiency in filings’ processing, market performanc­e, legal and administra­tive protection and public awareness, Zhang added.

The stockpilin­g of creations has brought about a boom in the IP market.

More than 3,600 patent col later ali zed loans worth 43.3 billion yuan ($6.37 billion) were issued by financial institutio­ns nationwide in 2016.

Nearly 137,900 patents and rights to filings were transferre­d in 2016 — an increase of 54.8 percent compared with a year earlier — while total annual licensing fees dropped slightly to $23.1 billion.

Trademark-collateral­ized loans increased 20 percent to 65 billion yuan last year.

Guangdong province, again, topped all 31 provinces, municipali­ties and autonomous regions on the Chinese mainland in terms of its IP comprehens­ive developmen­t index, a measure created in the report.

Beijing took second place and Shanghai ranked No 3 in the ranking, followed by Zhejiang and Jiangsu provinces.

The report also featured internatio­nal comparison­s among Singapore, 34 members of the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t and the emerging economies of Brazil, Russia, India and South Africa.

The countries together contribute­d more than 98 percent of global research and developmen­t expenditur­es and approximat­ely 89 percent of invention patent filings worldwide. Their combined GDP accounted for roughly 88 percent of the world’s total.

Han’s team conducted research into IP creation, utilizatio­n, protection, management, domestic innovation­s’ contributi­ons, internatio­nal influence, systems, markets and culture in the countries from 2011 to 2015 to evaluate their IP capacity, performanc­e and environmen­t.

China raised its position in the world ranking from No 19 in 2012 to No 10 in 2015, while the United States, Japan, South Korea and Germany remained in the top four.

The report is designed to reflect difference­s among the respective local economies and provide references for policymake­rs, Han said.

“China is increasing­ly approachin­g its goal of building itself into a strong IP powerhouse,” Han said. “The key to the goal is how many core technologi­es and wellestabl­ished brands we have and how much our innovation capacities can improve.”

 ?? FAN SONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A visitor takes photos of a model of the C919 plane, China’s first home-developed large passenger jet, at an exhibition in Beijing.
FAN SONG / FOR CHINA DAILY A visitor takes photos of a model of the C919 plane, China’s first home-developed large passenger jet, at an exhibition in Beijing.

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