Title: Patent Cooperation Treaty Reform and Beyond
1Patent Cooperation Treaty Reform and Beyond
- A United States Perspective
- American Bar Association
- 17th Annual Intellectual Property Law Conference
- April 11-12, 2002
- Lois E. Boland
- Office of Legislative and International Affairs
- USPTO
2Overview
- PCT reform in the context of worldwide patent
reform - Background of current reform efforts
- PLT 2000
- PCT reform
- Next Steps substantive harmonization, WIPOnet,
Trilateral, etc. - Conclusion
3Driving Forces for World-wide Patent Reform
- Positive correlation between strong patent
protection and economic development - Patent application filing increases throughout
the world - Costs associated with obtaining, maintaining and
litigating patents - Duplication of effort among patent offices
- Workload concerns at patent offices
4Driving Forces for World-wide Patent Reform
- Calls for cost reduction, simplification and
streamlining - Integration of electronic filing, processing and
communication efficiencies - Integration of national and international
processing - Message received status quo is not an option
reform is imperative
5Background to Current Efforts
- Efforts to create a comprehensive patent law
treaty date back a number of years - Patent Cooperation Treaty in force and growing
since 1978 - TRIPS Agreement established minimum standards for
protection URAA - AIPA
- PLT 2000 formalities treaty
6Patent Law Treaty of 2000
- Discussions began at WIPO in 1995, Treaty
concluded at Geneva in 2000 - 27 Articles and 21 Rules
- Governs the maximum formal or procedural
requirements that may be imposed upon patent
applicants and patentees.
7Patent Law Treaty of 2000
- Filing Date must be given if applicant files
- (1) indication that elements are application
- (2) indications for identifying/contacting
applicant - (3) description or drawing in any language
- Application/communication requirements
- Representation issues
- Relief in respect of time limits, reinstatement
of rights and restoration of priority right
8Patent Law Treaty of 2000
- No formal requirements different from or
additional to those in the Patent Cooperation
Treaty may be imposed. - Provisions articles and rules - cover wide
range of formalities. - Ratification and implementation packages
currently under development in the United States.
9Next Steps
- PCT reform
- Convergence of national and international
practices - Substantive patent law harmonization
- Trilateral Cooperation and WIPOnet
- Work sharing, mutual recognition and full faith
and credit - The global patent
10PCT Reform
- United States Proposal for PCT Reform
- Results of the September 2001 PCT Union and
November 2001 PCT Reform Working Group Meetings - Current focus of PCT reform efforts
11PCT Reform
- United States Proposal to Reform the PCT in
PCT/R/1/2 - Stage 1 - Simplification of procedures and
conformance to the PLT. - Stage 2 - Comprehensive overhaul of the PCT
system.
12PCT Reform
- PCT Assembly in September 2000 decided to convene
a Committee to Reform the PCT at WIPO, responsive
to U.S. proposal. - First Meeting of Reform Committee in May 2001
results in formation of Working Group to consider
technical issues and draft language. First
meeting of Working Group held in November 2001
next in April 2002.
13PCT Reform
- Major elements of First Stage
- Elimination of designations
- Conforming filing date to PLT
- Elimination of 20-month deadline for national
stage entry - Elimination of demands
- Combination of search and examination
14PCT Reform
- Time Frame -
- First Stage within next few years elimination
of 20 month deadline adopted at PCT Assembly in
September 2001. - Second Stage - Longer term plan
15PCT Reform
- Results of the 2001 PCT Union Meeting, the
Assembly - (i) unanimously adopted the modifications of the
time limits fixed in Article 22(1) of the PCT
from 20 months to 30 months for performing acts
necessary to enter the national phase, and - (ii) unanimously adopted the decisions relating
to entry into force and transitional arrangements
entry into force on April 1, 2002 for any
international application for which 20 month
period expires on or after that date, with
transitional arrangements, as necessary.
16PCT Reform
- Implementation in the United States of the 20 to
30 month change for Chapter I processing - USPTO published a final rule on January 4, 2002,
to amend 37 CFR 1.494, effective April 1, 2002
Federal Register Vol. 67, No. 3, page 520, et
seq. - Implementation in other contracting states
17PCT Reform
- Other Assembly Actions
- Reduced fees by decreasing the maximum number of
designation fees payable from 6 to 5, to enter
into force on January 1, 2002 - Approved establishment of a working group on PCT
Reform, first session Nov 2001 - Appointed the Spanish Patent and Trademark Office
as an IPEA - Approved text of amended Agreement between the
EPO and the International Bureau
18PCT Reform
- EPO-IB Agreement amendments - the EPO may, as of
November 1, 2001, - Cease acting as ISA/IPEA for certain
international applications - Limit the number of such applications or
- Limit the fields of such applications.
- EPO Notice - www.european-patent-office.org/epo/pr
esident/e/2001_12_11_e.htm
19PCT Reform
- EPO Notice EPO will not carry out -
- International search in respect of any
international application filed on or after 1
March 2002 by a national or resident of the
United States where such application contains one
or more claims relating to certain fields of
biotechnology or business methods - International preliminary examination in respect
of any such application where such application
contains one or more claims as above or relating
to the field of telecommunication - Initial duration of limitations will be three
years
20PCT Reform
- USPTO Notice in response to amended agreement
between WIPO and EPO - http//www.uspto.gov/web/of
fices/pac/dapp/opla/preognotice/epodoc.htm - Impact at USPTO not yet known
- 20 to 30 month change may relieve some workload
pressure on EPO
21PCT Reform
- Focus at November WG and continuing focus
- Certain items from initial US proposal, with
modifications per EPO proposal - national stage entry at 30 months
- combination of search and examination - expanded
international search report - EISR - IPER triggered only if applicant responds to
expanded international search report - Implementation - integrated processing of
national and international applications in the
USPTO
22PLT 2000 and PCT Reform
- Convergence of national and international
practices - 2000 PLT - incorporation of PCT form and
content requirements - Reformed PCT - among other changes,
PLT-consistency - Objective - ability to prepare a relatively
simplified application in a single format,
preferably in electronic form, that would be
accepted by all patent offices as
national/international application
23Next Steps Substantive Harmonization
- November 2000, Standing Committee on Law of
Patents resumes substantive harmonization
discussion. - Met May 14-19, 2001 and November 5-9, 2001 to
discuss treaty drafts - Next meeting May 2002
- All documents for SCP meetings available on
WIPOs website
24Next Steps Substantive Harmonization
- New approach - Deep Harmonization - for both
law and underlying practice - Determine the Best Practice involving drafting,
filing and examination of patent applications. - Goal is work sharing or mutual recognition
among Patent Offices.
25Next Steps Substantive Harmonization
- Success would allow applicants to draft a single
application for use in multiple countries without
amendment, with similar substantive results. - Building on PLT 2000 and PCT Reform efforts
- First-to-invent vs. first-to-file issue not
currently on the table - USPTO/U.S. currently in preparation for May 2002
SCP meeting which will consider new draft of
treaty, regulations
26Next Steps Trilateral Cooperation
- Trilateral Cooperation
- efficient exchange of information
- reduce duplication of effort, workload issues
mutual exploitation with JPO - TRI-Net
- common documentation resources and database
search tools - search and examination exchanges/studies
27Next Steps - WIPOnet
- WIPOnet
- access to and exchange of IP information for all
WIPO countries - global cooperation
- benefits to smaller patent offices and offices in
developing countries
28Next Steps Mutual Recognition, etc.
- Work-sharing, mutual recognition, full faith and
credit - Work-sharing - benefits of IPDLs
- Work of SCP important to full faith and credit
effort so that offices may confidently rely on
work by other offices - Sovereignty issues
- The global patent - rights of inventors
recognized without having to seek patent
protection in each of the countries of the world
29Conclusion
- URAA and AIPA implemented
- Harmonization moving forward TRIPs, PLT 2000,
PCT Reform, substantive talks at SCP - Integration of national and international
requirements and processing - Benefits of electronic filing and processing
- Goal Global protection of patent rights by the
overhaul and convergence of existing national and
international systems
30Contact Information
- Office of Legislative and International Affairs
- (703) 305-9300
- USPTO
- www.uspto.gov