China Hits Top Three in Patent Applications
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Posted on September 4, 2007
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| China is working on becoming a world leader in technological innovation. Photo Credit: Stock.xchng.com |
According to the annual 'Statistics on Worldwide Patent Activities' report, released by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) last week (10 August), patent applications were up 32.9 percent in 2005 compared to the previous year.
Of the 170,000 patent applications submitted to China's State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO) in 2005, around 93,000 were from within China.
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According to the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) statistics, patent applications in China have increased more than eight-fold since 1995.
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China now ranks third — behind Japan and United States, but in front of the European Union — in terms of the total number of patent applications filed.
According to the WIPO statistics, patent applications in China have increased more than eight-fold since 1995.
The report indicates that patent applications in China, like in other countries, increased dramatically in fields like telecommunications and electronics.
Chen Naiwei, director of the Intellectual Property Research Centre at Shanghai Jiao tong University, says rapid economic progress, a dramatic increase in China's research and development budget and government policy promoting intellectual property rights are behind the increase.
Total research and development investment in China grew by 22 percent in 2006, totaling 300 billion yuan (US$39.6 billion) or 1.4 percent of the country's gross domestic product.
But Chen cautions that patent applications may not accurately reflect innovation.
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Chen says that improving innovation is more important than offering fees and awards.
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More important than offering fees and awards, Chen says, is improving innovation by combining enterprises with research institutes.
Most patents filed in China are for new design appearance or new models, which do not require great technical innovation, he adds.
Contributed by Jia Hepeng. Reprinted with permission from SciDev.Net.
To read another Global Envision article about China's need for increased innovation, see China's Roadmap.
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