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WIPO Report Lists China’s Patent Office as No. 1

Issued: January 01 2013

A new WIPO report shows that while the global economy continued to underperform, intellectual property filings worldwide kept growing strongly in 2011. It also finds that China’s patent office became the largest in the world, as measured by the number of patent applications received. Before 2011, China already accounted for most filings of utility models (UMs), trademarks and industrial designs, a WIPO statement said.

 
World Intellectual Property Indicators 2012 shows that patent filings worldwide grew by 7.8% in 2011, exceeding 7% growth for the second year in a row. Similarly, UM, industrial design and trademark filings increased by 35%, 16% and 13.3%, respectively.
 
“Sustained growth in IP filings indicates that companies continue to innovate despite weak economic conditions. This is good news, as it lays the foundation for the world economy to generate growth and prosperity in the future,” said WIPO Director General Francis Gurry.
 
China’s State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO) overtook the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) in 2011 to become the largest patent office in the world, after having surpassed the Japan Patent Office (JPO) in 2010. In the 100 years before 2011, only three patent offices – Germany, Japan and the United States – had occupied the position of largest office.
 
In the report’s foreword, Gurry said that “even though caution is required in directly comparing IP filing figures across countries, these trends nevertheless reflect how the geography of innovation has shifted.”
 
For the first time in 2011, the total number of patent applications filed worldwide exceeded the 2 million mark. The 2.14 million applications filed consisted of 1.36 million resident and 780,000 non resident applications. Following a drop of 3.6% in 2009, patent applications rebounded strongly in 2010 with growth of 7.5% and with 7.8% growth in 2011.
 
In 2011, China received 526,412 applications compared to 503,582 for the US and 342,610 for Japan. The growth in patent filings in China was mostly due to sharp growth in resident filings. Between 2009 and 2011, patent filings worldwide increased by 293,900. SIPO accounted for 72% of this increase.
 
The majority of the top 20 offices saw growth in patent filings in 2011 with China (34.6%), Hong Kong (15.3%) and South Africa (13.5%) seeing double-digit growth. Filing behavior at offices of middle- and low-income countries show mixed trends. The offices of Algeria (11.3%), Madagascar (41.9%) and Saudi Arabia (6.3%) saw considerable growth in 2011, mainly due to growth in non-resident filings. In contrast, Guatemala (-13.1%), Jamaica (-27.6%) and Jordan (-15.6%) saw substantial filing declines.
 
Data by applicants’ country of origin show that residents of Japan filed the largest number of applications (472,417) across the world in 2011. China, which saw 41.3% growth in 2011, overtook the US to become the second largest country for origin counts. The field of digital communication saw the highest average annual growth rate (+8.1%) between 2006 and 2010. Filings for pharmaceuticals have continuously declined since 2007. Computer technology accounted for the largest number of applications (126,897) filed worldwide.
 
Patent applications for four energyrelated technologies – fuel cells, geothermal, solar and wind energy – increased by 8% in 2010 to 34,873. Residents of Japan filed the largest number of applications relating to solar energy and fuel cell technologies, while residents of Germany and the US accounted for the largest numbers of applications relating to geothermal and wind energy, respectively.
 
In 2011, the estimated number of patents granted approached the one million mark, with 606,800 issued to residents and 390,000 to non-residents. Grants worldwide grew by 9.7% in 2011. The JPO (with 238,323) granted the largest number of patents, followed by the USPTO (224,505).
 
The number of potentially pending applications worldwide – defined as all unprocessed applications at any stage in the applications process – declined by 4.9% in 2011, following a 3.3% decrease in 2010. The JPO was the main contributor to this trend. Based on estimates from 76 offices, the number of potentially pending applications worldwide stood at 4.8 million in 2011. A record 4.2 million trademark applications were filed worldwide in 2011. Of the 6.2 million application class counts, residents accounted for 4.5 million and non-residents for 1.7 million.
 
The majority of the top 20 offices saw growth in filings in 2011 (based on class count data), with China (31.2%), Brazil (21.6%), the United Kingdom (16.4%) and Hong Kong (16.1%) recording the fastest growth. The IP office of India has also seen considerable increases over the past few years. In fact, India surpassed Japan in 2010 and South Korea in 2011.
 
 
Overview of resident IP activity by origin, 2011, for top 10 and Asian jurisdictions

Rank Origin Patents Marks Designs
1 China 1 1 1
2 Germany 5 4 2
3 United States 3 2 9
4 Japan 2 8 6
5 South Korea 4 9 3
6 France 7 3 8
7 Italy 9 10 4
8 India 10 5 11
9 Turkey 17 6 5
10 United Kingdom 8 11 10
11 Russia 6 7 16
18 Australia 25 16 17
29 Thailand 37 27 ..
30 Vietnam 48 20 29
32 New Zealand 28 35 39
35 Malaysia 33 38 ..
37 Hong Kong 60 28 25
40 Singapore 35 48 36
44 Israel 31 59 ..
45 Saudi Arabia 46 .. 44
52 Philippines 57 40 ..
54 Sri Lanka 53 55 ..
67 Bangladesh 81 45 ..


Note: The rankings are based on the number of resident applications by origin. The table reports origins for which at least two types of IP data are available.

 

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