The number
of patents granted in China last year was 40 percent higher than
in 2009, according to the national patent watchdog.
China's State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO) said in a
statement Wednesday that it received over 1.2 million patent
applications and approved 814,825 requests among them last year.
The application number was over 25 percent more than that in
2009.
Among three types of patent applications administered by the
SIPO, invention patents accounted for over 85 percent in each
year's foreign applications since 2005, while domestic
applications for invention patents accounted for 26 percent
during the same period, it said.
The number of foreign applications for invention patents in 2010
rose about 15 percent from 2009, although the number of approved
foreign applications dropped 12.3 percent.
Along with that drop, domestic applications experienced a large
leap -- Chinese applications took over 59 percent of all
invention patents granted in 2010. The figure was 50.9 in 2009,
exceeding foreign applicants' share for the first time.
SIPO's statement attributes the rise to the improved quality of
domestic inventions, the country's enhanced capacity in
independent innovation and the growing awareness of intellectual
property rights (IPRs).
The SIPO also released the result of an IPR protection campaign
launched last November. Further, the country's IPR authorities
had accepted over 400 patent disputes and resolved 233 patent
counterfeiting cases.
(News from XinhuaNet )