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WIPO report shows patent applications increase in China
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10:48, August 10, 2007

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Patent applications in China increase very quickly in recent years, which reflects the rising level of innovation in the country, the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) said on Friday.

In 2005, for which latest complete statistics are available, China's patent office experienced the highest growth rate of 42.1 percent in resident patent filings, the UN agency said in its annual world patent report.

China's patent office processed more than 173,000 patent applications in 2005, among which 93,172 are direct filings by Chinese residents, the report said. Patent applications by non-residents (foreign individuals and companies) also increased markedly in China.

Worldwide, about 1,660,000 patent applications were filed in 2005, an increase of 7 percent over 2004, the report said.

The largest recipients of patent filings are the patent offices of Japan, the United States, China, South Korea and the European Patent Office. These five offices accounted for 77 percent of all patents filed in 2005.

According to the report, North East Asian countries, particularly China and South Korea, have significantly increased their share of worldwide patenting, both as a source of patent applications and as a target of non-resident patent applications.

The South Korean patent office received a total of more than 160,000 patent applications (including both resident and non-resident applications) in 2005, an increase of 14.8 percent over 2004.

The geography of innovation is having a significant shift, WIPO Deputy Director-General Francis Gurry told reporters in Geneva.

"A few years ago, they took the patent world by surprise, but it is now very much the expectation that countries like China and the Republic of Korea will continue their rapid developments in innovation, one indicator of which is the number of patent applications filed," he said.

Source: Xinhua



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