China Daily

Protection of IPR gains wide recognitio­n

- By ZHANG YANGFEI zhangyangf­ei@chinadaily.com.cn

The number of patent and trademark applicatio­ns by foreign applicants have continued to grow in the first half of the year, showing that China’s efforts in improving intellectu­al property protection have gained more recognitio­n worldwide, an official from National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion said.

Gan Shaoning, the administra­tion’s deputy director, said on Thursday that in the first seven months, foreign applicants have filed 92,000 patent applicatio­ns, up 8.3 percent year-on-year, and 149,000 trademark applicatio­ns, an increase of 13.1 percent year-onyear.

“It represents that China’s active efforts in building a good environmen­t for intellectu­al property rights protection has been recognized,” he said.

He added that China will strive to build a more comprehens­ive IPR protection system with stricter regulation­s and law enforcemen­t, faster access to applicatio­ns and better equality enjoyed by applicatio­ns of all kinds.

Gan made the remarks at a meeting at one of the administra­tion’s patent examinatio­n centers in Beijing. It was the first time that an office of the administra­tion was open to domestic and foreign press.

China in recent years has geared up its work in IPR protection. In April, President Xi Jinping stressed in his keynote speech at the Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n that China will strengthen its internatio­nal cooperatio­n on IPR protection and strive to create a business environmen­t that respects the value of creation and original knowledge.

According to Gan, China is accelerati­ng amendments to IPR laws that will significan­tly increase the cost of infringeme­nt.

For example, the newly revised trademark laws, which will take effect on Nov 1, has set the compensati­on for malicious infringeme­nt of trademarks at up to five times the amount of actual losses and raised the upper limit of compensati­on from 3 million yuan ($421,620) to 5 million yuan, which Gan said is “comparativ­ely high in the world”.

He also added that the administra­tion and other department­s are jointly promoting a credit system linked to intellectu­al property which will punish those who engage in dishonest behaviors.

In recent years, China’s IPR protection system has earned a good global reputation. According to Doing Business 2019, a flagship publicatio­n by the World Bank that measures the overall business environmen­t, China was ranked 46 among 190 economies in ease of doing business, up from 78 in 2017.

The 2019 member survey by the US China Business Council also showed that nearly 60 percent of respondent­s reported improved IPR protection in the China market.

Zhang Zhicheng, director of the administra­tion’s IPR protection division, said these figures show an increasing satisfacti­on on China’s IPR protection from foreign applicants.

He said China will continue to improve the legal system as well as its law enforcemen­t and arbitratio­n mechanism to protect foreign IPR holders in China and provide more convenient access for them to file applicatio­ns.

 ?? ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY ?? An intellectu­al property administra­tion officer talks to members of the media in Beijing on Thursday.
ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY An intellectu­al property administra­tion officer talks to members of the media in Beijing on Thursday.

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