1 / 60

The European Patent Office An introduction to the EPO and the European patent system

The European Patent Office An introduction to the EPO and the European patent system. SIPO-OHIM-EPO Joint Seminar on European Patents and Designs Chongqing, 16-17 September 2008. Pedro Osona Project Leader EPO's China Cooperation Programme. Contents. Patents Ab out the EPO What we do

verda
Download Presentation

The European Patent Office An introduction to the EPO and the European patent system

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The European Patent OfficeAn introduction to the EPO and the European patent system SIPO-OHIM-EPO Joint Seminar on European Patents and Designs Chongqing, 16-17 September 2008 Pedro Osona Project Leader EPO's China Cooperation Programme

  2. Contents • Patents • About the EPO • What we do • European Patent Grant Procedure • Quality • Facts and figures • Cost of an European Patent • International Cooperation • EPO view of the future

  3. What is a patent? • A patent is a legal title granting its holder the right to prevent third parties from commercially using an invention without authorisation. • In return for this protection, the holder has to disclose the invention to the public. • Protection is granted: • for a limited period, generally 20 years • for a specific geographic area

  4. What is patentable? • To be patentable, an invention must: • have a technical character (e.g. comprise a product, process or apparatus) • be new • involve an inventive step • be industrially applicable • Some innovations are not patentable under the EPC: • for example, mathematical methods or formulae, computer programs and business methods as such are not regarded as inventions • new plant or animal varieties and inventions whose commercial exploitation would be contrary to "order public" or morality (e.g. the cloning of human life) are examples of inventions excluded from patentability

  5. The benefits of patents (I) For inventors, patents can • help safeguard financial returns from the commercial exploitation of the invention • give holders time to recoup their development costs • encourage further investment in R&D

  6. European patents foster technical innovation, which is crucial to competitiveness and overall economic growth in Europe The benefits of patents (II) For the economy in Europe, patents are a prime source of new technical knowledge. Patents can help: • identify new technological trends and new business partners • inspire further inventions • prevent the duplication of R&D in industry and universities

  7. Contents • Patents • About the EPO • What we do • European Patent Grant Procedure • Quality • Facts and figures • Cost of an European Patent • International Cooperation • EPO view of the future

  8. Our mission As the patent office for Europe, we support innovation, competitiveness and economic growth across Europe through a commitment to high quality and efficient services delivered under the European Patent Convention.

  9. The European Patent Convention • The European Patent Convention (EPC) • provides the legal framework for the granting of European patents via a centralised procedure • establishes the European Patent Organisation • 1973 – Diplomatic Conference in Munich ► signature of the EPC by 16 countries • 1977 – Entry into force of the EPC in 7 countries

  10. European Patent Organisation Administrative Council European Patent Office • The executive body • responsible for examining European patent applications • The legislative body • made up of delegates from themember states • supervises the activities of the Office • has a specific legislative function Structure of the European Patent Organisation

  11. 34 member states Austria • Belgium • Bulgaria • Croatia • Cyprus • Czech Republic • Dänemark • Estonia • Finland • France • Germany •Greece • Hungary • Iceland • Ireland • Italy • Latvia • Liechtenstein • Lithuania •Luxembourg • Malta • Monaco • Netherlands • Norway • Poland • Portugal • Romania • Slovakia • Slovenia • Spain • Sweden • Switzerland • Turkey • United Kingdom European patent applications and patents can also be extended at the applicant's request to the following states: Albania • Bosnia-Herzegovina • Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia • Serbia

  12. Autonomy • Second largest intergovernmental institution in Europe • Not an EU institution • Self-financing, i.e. revenuefrom fees covers operatingand capital expenditure

  13. Structure President Alison Brimelow Presidential area Directorates-General Operations Thomas Hammer Operational Support Peter Vermeij Appeals Peter Messerli Administration Brian McGinley ad interim Legal/International Affairs Manuel Desantes Status: September 2008

  14. Structure President Alison Brimelow Presidential area Directorates-General Operations Thomas Hammer Operational Support Peter Vermeij Appeals Peter Messerli Administration Brian McGinley ad interim Legal/InternationalAffairs Manuel Desantes Personnel Search Patent Administration Appeals European and InternationalAffairs General Administration Substantive Examination Quality Management International Legal Affairs and Patent Law Language Service Opposition Information Management Patent Information Legal Services EuropeanPatent Academy Status: September 2008

  15. Munich 3 514 The Hague 2 579 Berlin 283 Vienna 119 Brussels 4 Total 6 499 Number of staff Around 60% are patent examiners Status: December 2007

  16. Country Number of staff Country Number of staff BG Bulgaria EE Estonia ES Spain BE Belgium CH Switzerland DK Denmark CZ Czech Republic AT Austria Others FI Finland GB United Kingdom TR Turkey SK Slovakia SI Slovenia CY Cyprus PT Portugal SE Sweden GR Greece HU Hungary IT Italy LI Liechtenstein LT Lithuania IE Ireland LV Latvia MT Malta RO Romania NL Netherlands PL Poland LU Luxembourg • 48 • 511 • 155 • 4 • 26 • 25 • 473 • 409 • 16 • 1 • 3 • 75 • 81 • 8 • 98 • 4 • 63 • 1 • 76 • 53 • 362 • 83 • 28 • 231 • 12 • 15 • 4 • 634 • 127 DE Germany • 1 720 FR France • 1 153 Total • 6 499 Staff from 30 different countries Status: December 2007

  17. Locations The EPO has offices at five different locations. Its headquarters are in Munich.

  18. Munich • Patent grant procedure • Appeals • Quality management • Administration • Legal services • International affairs

  19. The Hague • Patent grant procedure • Information management • Administration • Legal services

  20. Berlin • Patent grant procedure • Administration

  21. Vienna • Patent information • Administration • European affairs

  22. Brussels • Relations with the European institutions and other organisations/associations

  23. Contents • Patents • About the EPO • What we do • European Patent Grant Procedure • Quality • Facts and figures • Cost of an European Patent • International Cooperation • EPO view of the future

  24. Our role in the European patent system • We provide patent protection in up to 38 European countries based on a single application in one of the three official languages (German, English, French) European patent applications can be filed: • direct with the EPO • via the national patent offices of the contracting states • based on an international (PCT) application • We are also responsible for • limitation and revocation proceedings by patentees • opposition proceedings by third parties • appeal proceedings before the Boards of Appeal

  25. Our role in the international (PCT) system • We process international patent applications • we act as a receiving office for international applications (PCT) • we carry out international preliminary search and examination procedures

  26. Other services • Free online services • filing • fee payment • file inspection • tracking of legal status of applications • Free patent information services • online access to all European patent documents (updated weekly) • simple online searches in our database of over 60 million patent applications • helpdesk staffed by experts on the Japanese, Chinese and Korean patent systems • Training • conferences • workshops and seminars • e-learning

  27. Online filing Thanks to the EPO's electronic epoline service, applicants are able to file patent applications via the Internet. Online fee payment and file inspection are also available.

  28. Patent documents on the Internet 1998 The esp@cenet database is launched, making patent information available to the public via the Internet. Today the EPO's worldwide patent search database gives users free access to more than 60 million patent documents (mostly patent applications).

  29. Contents • Patents • About the EPO • What we do • European Patent Grant Procedure • Quality • Facts and figures • Cost of an European Patent • International Cooperation • EPO view of the future

  30. Refusal or withdrawal of application Validation in designated states European patent application Applicant Filing and formalities examination Substantive examination Grant of European patent Search and search report together with preliminary opinion on patentability EPO Publication of application and search report Online access to application file and legal status information Publication of patent specification Public domain Overview of European patent grant procedure (I)

  31. Refusal of application Applicant Limitation or revocation proceedings Substantive examination Grant of European patent Appeal proceedings EPO Opposition proceedings Overview of European patent grant procedure (II)

  32. Contents • Patents • About the EPO • What we do • The European Patent Grant Procedure • Quality • Facts and figures • Cost of an European Patent • International Cooperation • EPO view of the future

  33. Highly skilled examiners Rigorous controls and commitment to improvement Quality Thorough and consistent procedures Comprehensivesearch documentation Four key ingredients

  34. Highly skilled examiners • Top-level engineers and scientists • high degree of technical expertise • knowledge of the EPO's three official languages • Training during first two years • extensive legal and procedural training • individual coaching by experienced examiners • Continuing professional development throughout career

  35. Thorough and consistent procedures • Single procedure • the European Patent Convention provides the legal framework for the granting of European patents • Systematic approach • each application is examined by a division of three technically qualified examiners • Review processes • each opposition is examined by three technically qualified examiners,at least two of whom will not have been involved in the grant proceedings for the patent • appeals heard by independent second-instance judiciary (Boards of Appeal)

  36. Comprehensive search documentation • World's largest collection of patent and non-patent literature documents, containing more than 400 million records in over 100 databases and updated daily • Online access to more than 6 000 journals via the EPO Virtual Library • New tools and services such as machine translation to extend the range of easily accessible information • Ongoing efforts to improve the scope and quality of our documentation

  37. Rigorous controls and commitment to improvement • Up-to-date guidelines and instructions for examiners • Spot-checks on search reports and patent quality • Internal quality audits

  38. Contents • Patents • About the EPO • What we do • The European Patent Grant Procdure • Quality • Facts and figures • Cost of an European Patent • International Cooperation • EPO view of the future

  39. Applications filed Direct European filings Euro-PCT applications entering the regional phase

  40. European patents granted

  41. Applications by residence of applicant (2007)

  42. 61 309 Technical fields with the most filings (2007) Number of applications

  43. High-growth technical fields (at least 500 applications filed in 2007) 721 826 639 1 860 2 637 1 808 621 1 391 804 533 Number of applications in 2007 % growth in number of applications 2007 vs. 2006

  44. Leading applicants and patentees in 2007 Applications Granted European patents

  45. Oppositions in 2007 Oppositions were filed against 5% of granted European patents. Around one third of all opposed patents were revoked. Opposition rejected Patent revoked 31.5% 38.3% 5% Oppositions 30.2% Granted patents Patent maintained in amended form

  46. Contents • Patents • About the EPO • What we do • The European Patent Grant Procedure • Quality • Facts and figures • Cost of an European Patent • International Cooperation • EPO view of the future

  47. Cost of an European Patent • EPO fees for granting a Patent amount toEUR 4 600 • This price does not include: - Professional representation before the EPO - Translation/publication in the contracting Member States (depending on the number of national languages the documents need to be translated). - National renewal fees (depending on the designated number of Member States by the applicant).

  48. Contents • Patents • About the EPO • What we do • The European Patent Grant Procedure • Quality • Facts and figures • Cost of an European Patent • International Cooperation • EPO view of the future

  49. International Cooperation • Co-operation with developing countries and countries with emerging economies: - India -ASEAN - OAPI - ARIPO - Latin America • Co-operation with other OECD countries (non-MS): Australia, Canada and New Zealand • Trilateral Co-operation (EPO, JPO, USPTO) • Cooperation with China and Special Economic Regions • Korea

  50. TRILATERAL COOPERATION In 1983The EPO and the Japanese and US patent offices set up programme of trilateral co-operation which so far has included technical standards, new databases, document exchange and electronic filing. Today, the works of the Trilateral Organisation are aimed at: • Promoting harmonisation aimed to solve common problems and increase efficiency. • Coordinating projects and exchange programmes. • Promoting the communication among the POs and the user associations of the 3 regions (Industry Trilateral).

More Related