China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Shenzhen remains mainland’s leader in PCT, trademark filings

- By CHEN HONG in Shenzhen, Guangdong chenhong@chinadaily.com.cn

Shenzhen, a young innovative city in South China, has maintained its national leading position across major intellectu­al property indexes this year, with double-digit growth in most areas.

The market regulatory department of the city, which oversees IP issues, has improved the legal environmen­t for IP protection and taken new measures to further stimulate motivation in companies toward new technologi­es, said senior officials at the department.

According to the official statistics, a total of 28,000 companies filed 219,000 patent applicatio­ns in Shenzhen in the first three quarters of this year, posting a year-on-year increase of nearly 17.2 percent. At the same time, about 164,000 patents were granted domestical­ly, up about 34.5 percent from a year before. Both ranked first among big cities in China.

The city’s internatio­nal applicatio­ns filed via the Patent Cooperatio­n Treaty continued to grow during the period from January to September this year, up 22.7 percent from a year before. The city currently ranks in first place among major mainland cities for PCT filings, the 16th consecutiv­e year it has done so.

Meanwhile, the city’s trademark applicatio­ns have surged by roughly 20 percent year-on-year, the official figures show.

Shenzhen is stepping up efforts to improve its IP protection system to shield new technologi­es and support the city’s quality developmen­t, said Xia Kunshan, a senior official of Shenzhen Administra­tion for Market Regulation.

Dubbed China’s Silicon Valley, Shenzhen has seen remarkable growth in innovative companies in a wide range of fields in recent years, including artificial intelliof gence, new-generation informatio­n technology and biomedicin­e, driving demand for intellectu­al property protection.

In 2019, scientific research and developmen­t input in Shenzhen hit nearly 133 billion yuan ($20.3 billion), accounting for 4.9 percent the city’s GDP, a level matching some developed countries.

The city implemente­d a regulation on technologi­cal innovation on Nov 1, that has been widely seen as an important local rule that can encourage and protect scientific innovation.

For example, it is stipulated in the regulation that no less than 30 percent of the city government fund for research and developmen­t should go to fundamenta­l research and applied basic research annually — the first mainland city to take such an action.

The rule follows the revision of the city’s regulation on IP protection in July, which was in effect from March 2019 and aims to establish the strictest IP protection system for the city’s innovation-driven developmen­t.

The revision includes the introducti­on of a punitive compensati­on system and an increase in the compensati­on cap.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A staff member (right) at a trademark service center in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, processes an applicatio­n from a business representa­tive.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A staff member (right) at a trademark service center in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, processes an applicatio­n from a business representa­tive.

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