An intellectual property rights (IPR) development program has for the first
time been incorporated into national planning.
The 11th Five-Year Plan includes an IPR plan, highlighting IPR's role in
promoting social and economic growth.
The draft of the IPR development program for 2006-10 has
been submitted to the State Council for approval, and will be made public soon,
according to the State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO).
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A man looks at anti-piracy posters at a recent exhibtion on IPR
protection in Beijing. It is expected that the number of patent
applications in China will maintain their annual growth rate of 10 to 20
percent over the next four years. File |
SIPO spokesman Yin Xintian said the program puts more emphasis on the quality
of China's intellectual properties, rather than their number, given that the
numbers of patents and trademarks are already the top in the world.
Statistics from SIPO show that the number of patent applications filed to the
office, including invention, utility, model and design, reached 573,000 in 2006,
jumping 20 percent year-on-year. The number of Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)
applications, or international applications, reached 3,826 in 2006, soaring 57
percent from that of 2005.
Patents top 3 million
It is expected that the number of patent applications in China will maintain
their annual growth rate of 10 to 20 percent over the next four years, Yin told
reports at a press conference yesterday in Beijing.
Yin said that by the end of 2006, the accumulated number of patent
applications topped 3.33 million, among which, 1.1 million were invention
patents.
"It took nearly 15 years for China to reach its first one million patent
applications, following the introduction of the Patent Law in the mid-1980s,"
Yin said. "It then took about four years to reach the next 1 million, but it
only took two more years to reach the three million mark."
However, the spokesman pointed out that though the growth of patents is much
faster than in the rest of world, the quality of domestic patents lags far
behind the leading IPR countries.
Yin said the national IPR strategy, which has been discussed by more than 20
ministries for nearly two years, will be finally agreed by June this year.
China's Vice-Premier Wu Yi heads the team that oversees the strategy,
assisted by senior officials from SIPO, the Ministry of Commerce, the National
Copyright Administration and the Administration for Industry and Commerce.
Yin said research into 20 projects under the strategy has been finished and
the reports will be sent to a panel of experts for deliberation next month. The
outline of the strategy is expected to be finalized by February.
Plans to help domestic businesses be more IPR-savvy are included in the
strategy, Yin said. The drive to encourage domestic companies to develop IPR
portfolios of their own comes as more and more businesses find themselves on the
wrong end of IPR lawsuits.
"The friction over IPR between domestic and overseas enterprises is on the
rise at present," said Yin. "But the pressure can help Chinese business people
have a better understanding of IPR, and make IPR an integral part of their
business strategy."
(China Daily 01/31/2007 page2)