The European Patent System: Drawbacks and challenges B. van Pottelsberghe Bruegel, Brussels 23 September, 2008 Context: To provide a detailed analysis of the European patent system: Challenges, Weaknesses, Policy recommendations Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 1
Methodology: Meet several actors from the business sector, Recent economic research (WPs), Book (Guellec and BVP, 2007), Statistical analyses, Today s workshop, Meetings at the EPO (October), Feedbacks from colleagues and selected experts on final version Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 2
Outline: Context Stylized facts The quality challenge Building Europe Policy recommendations Outline: Context Stylized facts Boom in filings Boom in size Burn out symptoms: backlogs Higher propensity, drop in quality The quality challenge Building Europe Policy recommendations Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 3
Total patent fillings at the USPTO, JPO and EPO, 1980-2006 500 450 EPO USPTO JPO 400 350 Thousands 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Drivers of the boom Fast developping countries (BRICS, South Korea, Taiwan); New technologies; New actors like SMEs; New actors like universities (from 0.5 to 4%); Globalization (made easy though the PCT process); Strategic patenting (higher propensity); Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 4
A higher propensity: patent per R&D expenditure (million 2000 US PPPs) 1000 800 600 400 200 0 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001 2006 EPO JPO USPTO Higher propensity due to strategic patenting to freeze a technology; to guarantee its own freedom to operate; Communication: an innovator on the market; to build negotiation power; to avoid being invented around (thickets); to invent around the patents filed by other companies; to create a smoke screen : i.e., hide the important one. to maximize the probability to have something granted Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 5
New filing strategies Patent drafting practices; Interaction with patent offices; Route chosen to patent at the EPO; TYPOLOGY Fast track and good will: small patents, well drafted, clearly written; direct replies. Deliberate abuse of the system : very large patents, unclear, multiple dependent claims; late replies, Divisionals... Average number of claims per patent filed at the USPTO, JPO and EPO, 1980-2006 30,0 25,0 EPO USPTO JPO 20,0 15,0 10,0 5,0 0,0 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 6
Incoming workload: total number claims filed, 1980-2006 (millions) 10 9 8 7 EPO JPO USPTO 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 induce growing backlogs and pendency Number of patents in examination 900 800 700 Thousands 600 500 400 300 200 100-1996 2000 2006 EPO* JPO USPTO Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 7
Number of claims in pendency (millions) 18,0 16,0 14,0 1996 2000 2006 12,0 10,0 8,0 6,0 4,0 2,0 0,0 EPO USPTO JPO Higher propensity and a drop in quality at EPO 3,0 2,5 2,0 1,5 1,0 0,5 Propensity SYI ACV %OP 1,2 1,1 1,0 0,9 0,8 0,7 0,6 0,5 0,4 1981 1983 1985 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 8
In a nutshell: Higher propensity to patent (strategic patenting) New filing strategies (larger patents) Generate backlogs - double at EPO since 2000 : more uncertainty - but three times larger at the USPTO With lower quality patents pending longer Puts pressure on examiners (more workload), and might reduce the quality of examination process Low quality of examination is dangerous (?) Problem more important for the US Solutions so far (press releases): Improved performance monitoring of examiners (strikes) Mutual recognition of search reports in Japan and USA Higher fees Use of work performed by national patent offices USPTO Use of work performed by national patent offices Use of work performed by EPO, JPO More examiners (sharp increase recently) Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 9
Outline: Context Stylized facts The quality challenge Transparency Flexibility Subject matter Quality of examination Building Europe Policy recommendations The quality challenge Transparency - Databases and search tools more widely available - Need for claim-based searches with AI software (public) - Publish requests for accelerated search and examinations - Database on patents in force (easy to search) - Advanced search services offered by NPOs - Other ideas...? Flexibility Subject matter Quality of examination Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 10
The quality challenge Transparency Flexibility for examination process? - Reduce reliance on excessive divisionals - Stop the presumption of validity (reverse?) - Oral proceedings controlled by examiners? Subject matter - Domains for which prior art is not codified (business methods, traditional knowledge) or difficult to identify (software, source codes) should not be patentable Quality of examination The quality challenge Transparency Flexibility for examination process? Subject matter Quality of examination - Important difference between the US and Europe? Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 11
Quality differences: Claims filed per examiner 3500 3000 2500 2000 USPTO JPO EPO (PCT-R) EPO (PCT-I) 1500 1000 500 0 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 The quality challenge Transparency Flexibility for examination process? Subject matter Quality of examination - Important difference between the US and Europe - 4 times more productive in the US and Japan than in Europe? - Reduce low quality filings with higher fees and more freedom for examiners (to reject badly drafted applications, to tackle patent flooding)? Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 12
Δ propensity 0,0-0,5-1,0-1,5 US-EP 1,0 0,5 0,0-0,5 Δ fees -2,0 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005-1,0 Δ propensity 4,0 3,0 2,0 1,0 EP-JP 0-3 -5-8 Δ fees 0,0 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005-10 Δ propensity US-JP 1,0 0 0,5-3 0,0-5 -0,5-8 -1,0-10 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Δ fees Fees (costs) and the demand for patents Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 13
Outline: Context Stylized facts The quality challenge Building Europe The cost of non-europe Economic incongruities Governance and stakes Policy recommendations A fragmented patent system MST 1 MST 1 MST 2 MST 2 MST 3 MST MST 34 EPO APPLICATION Centralized MST 3 MST MST 34 ENFORCEMENT Decentralized Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 14
Procedural steps and fees International extension (other patent offices or PCT) Drafting Priority Filing Search Grant Translation and Publication validation fees Request of examination Renewal fees Examination 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 t Procedural fees London Protocol Description Claims London Protocol (LP) Not LP Dispense Art 1(1) LP Claims Art 1(2) LP Claims and Description* Art 1(2) LP D: YES D: NO D: NO D: EN* C: YES C: NO CH/LI, DE, FR, LU, MC, UK C: YES LV, SI C: YES HR, DK, IS, NL, SE AT, BE, BG, CZ, CY, EE, ES, FI, GR, IE, HU, IT, LT, MT, NO, PL, PT, RO, SK, TR Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 15
Relative cost savings due to the ratification of the London Agreement, 2008 40,000 35,000 30,000 Cost in EU R 25,000 20,000 15,000 29% 24% Renewal fees Validation fees Translation cost Procedural fees 10,000 5,000 0 EPO-6 EPO-6 (LA) EPO-13 EPO-13 (LA) London Agreement: 19 countries left. Thousands 50 40 30 20 62% 10 0 EPO-3 EPO-3 (LA15) EPO-6 EPO-6 (LA15) EPO-13EPO-13 (LA15) EPO-34EPO-34 EPO-34 (LA15) (LA34) Procedural fees (EPO) Translation cost Validation fees (NPO) Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 16
Table 3: Relative cost savings due to the ratification of the London Agreement, 2008 1 Total savings for the business sector is 220 Million EUR EPO-3 (LA15) EPO-6 (LA15) EPO-13 (LA15) EPO-34 (LA15) absolute translation savings in EUR 2,432 3,648 4,864 9,728 Translation (%) 78% 59% 39% 26% Procedural and Translation (%) 26% 29% 24% 21% Procedural, Translation and External Services (%) - 16% - - 10Y excl. External Services (%) 21% 19% 14% 13% 10Y incl. External Services (%) - 11% - - International comparison of cumulated patent costs, 2008 35,000 30,000 25,000 20,000 Renewal fees (up to 10th) Translation cost Procedural cost 15,000 10,000 5,000 0 EPO-13 (LA15) EPO-6 (LA15) USPTO KIPO SIPO JPO BR-PO IN-PO AU-PO CIPO Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 17
Procedural and translation cost relative to the US, 2008 Per patent Per claim Per capita 3C-index EPO-13 9.0 11.4 7.3 9.2 EPO-6 5.6 7.1 6.0 7.5 EPO-13(LA15) 6.9 8.7 5.6 7.0 EPO-6 (LA15) 4.0 5.1 4.2 5.4 JPO, Japan 0.8 2.0 1.9 4.7 KIPO, South K. 0.7 1.7 4.5 10.8 SIPO, China 0.5 1.2 0.1 0.3 CIPO, Canada 0.5 0.6 4.6 5.3 IN-PO, India 0.4 1.0 0.1 0.3 BR-PO, Brazil 0.4 0.9 0.6 1.5 AU-PO, Australia 0.3 0.4 4.5 5.1 Source: Adapted from van Pottelsberghe and Mejer (2008). Renewal fees per million capita 250 v alue of renew al fees (in EU R ) per million capita 200 150 100 50 Reneval years counting from the filing date: 5th-10th 11th-15th 16th-20th 0 EPO-13 EPO-6 KIPO SIPO IN-PO JPO BR-PO US Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 18
A fragmented patent system MST 1 MST 1 MST 2 MST 2 MST 3 MST MST 34 EPO APPLICATION Centralized MST 3 MST MST 34 ENFORCEMENT Decentralized Diversity of national jurisdictions Germany France The Netherlands United Kingdom Judicial system Dual system Single system Single system Single system The Court of First Instance Specialized court Federal Patent Court for invalidity; 12 District Courts for infringement (specialized court in Düsseldorf and Mannheim) 10 Tribunal de Grande Instance; (specialized patent judges in Paris and Lyon) District Court in The Hague has a specialized IP chamber Patents Country Courts and the Patents Court of the High Court No of judges legally qualified out of those technically qualified Composition of the court (number of judges dealing with a case) 62 40 6 6 46 0 0 5 3 or 5 3 3 1 Source: Allgayer (2005), Council of the European Union Document No 11622/07 and EPO WPL/4/03; Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 19
Patent litigation cost in four EPC contracting states and US 1 (in EUR 1,000) 1 st Germany 2 France The Netherlands United Kingdom Cumulative 4 EPC United States n.a. 50 to 250 50 to 200 60 to 200 150 to 1,500 310 to 2,150 Instance 2 nd n.a. 90 to 190 40 to 150 40 to 150 150 to 1,000 320 to 1,490 Instance Total 140 to 440 90 to 350 100 to 350 300 to 2,500 630 to 3,640 420 Litigation demand curve, 2006 Number of litigations per 1,000 of patents in force 2,0 1,6 1,2 0,8 EPO (1.9;60) US DE* DE FR 0,4 DE** NL UK 0,0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 Litigation cost per 1,000 capita (in EUR) Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 20
Outline: Context Stylized facts The quality challenge Building Europe The cost of non-europe Economic incongruities Governance and stakes Policy recommendations Uncertainty and incongruities: 3 case studies EU competition policy and national patent rights Static (EU-DG Comp.) and dynamic efficiency (national) Different territorial jurisdictions, with different practices Intra-EU parallel trade and national protection Higher infringement risk, as no borders within EU Prohibitive cost of EU-wide protection Time paradox Inconsistent institutional order Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 21
The property hedge Patent holder: Epilady Invention: electronically powered depilatory device Year of grant: 1986 Alleged infringer: Remington First litigation filled: 1989 Discrepancy: Claim interpretation Validity Infringement CFI EC - EPO upheld AT - NO BE - YES DE - YES ES - - IT - YES FR - NO NL - YES UK - NO A local currency? Patent holder: Document Security System (DSS) Invention: non replicable document and method for making same Year of grant: 2002 Alleged infringer: European Central Bank Litigation filled: 2005 (CFI) Discrepancy: - ECB filed validity cases at N. C. in 2005 - Parallel infringement case at CFI Validity Infringement CFI pending EPO - AT pending - BE pending - DE upheld - ES pending - IT pending - FR revoked - NL upheld - UK revoked - Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 22
Coffee Wars Patent holder: Sara Lee/DE and Philips Electronics Invention: assembly for use in the coffee machine for preparing a coffee Year of grant: 2001 Alleged infringer: Belgian and Dutch retail chains First litigation: 2001 (NL) Discrepancy: Interpretation of indirect infringement Time paradox Belgium: held valid in 2004 EPO revoked: 2006 Validity Infringement CFI - EPO revoked AT - - BE upheld YES DE - - ES - - IT - - FR - - NL decision postponed NO UK - - Heterogenous countries Centralized European Court (EPO validity ECJ infringement) Epilady National Court Epilady VALIDITY INFRINGEMENT Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 23
Time paradox and heterogeneous countries Centralized European Court (EPO validity ECJ infringement) DSS National Court DSS VALIDITY INFRINGEMENT Time paradox? Centralized European Court (EPO validity ECJ infringement) Senseo National Court Senseo Senseo VALIDITY INFRINGEMENT Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 24
Summary EU competition policy and national patent rights Intra-EU parallel trade Epilady Senseo DSS Time paradox Remarks We confirm the classical drawback of the EPS: patenting costs in the EU is prohibitive due to translation costs and national fees And we illustrate two less classical backwards Heterogeneous litigations costs, high cumulated costs Incongruities and variegated national practices Implications : reduces the intended stimulating effect Costs (fee + managerial complexity) High level of uncertainty High managerial complexity: favours large players Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 25
Outline: Context Stylized facts The quality challenge Building Europe The cost of non-europe Economic incongruities Governance and stakes Policy recommendations Governance and stakes Conflict between NPO and EPO s interests Patent attorneys not convinced (translation business) Solution is with a Community patent with redistribution key New role of NPOs: support national innovation networks and offer search services, including PCT? Should the EPO be more responsive to EP? Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 26
Outline: Context Stylized facts The quality challenge Building Europe Policy recommendations Policy recommendations Solve the quality issues (more recommendations) Revise the EPC (economic evaluation, introduce recitals ) Increase fees for examination and renewals, reduce translations Community patent would induce lower relative fees Reduce fees for Universities and SMEs EPLA (still to be defined) New role for NPOs EPO more related to EP Surplus generated should be used to feed basic research Fix the European problems first, global harmonization later... (backlog is more important in the USA) F2F, Publication, Grace period, Wage, Quality... Bruegel, Brussels, 23 rd September 27