Intellectual property cooperation assists Belt and Road construction
By Qu
Song, People’s Daily
Intellectual
property (IP) has been among China’s priorities when it implements the Belt and
Road Initiative (BRI), given its importance in the cooperation among en-route
countries.
According to recent data released by the World
Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), China filed 48,882 applications
under the WIPO’s Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT), ranking the second in the
world.
It indicated that the country is beefing up IP
cooperation with its global partners when it steps towards an IP powerhouse.
Among the top 15 origins
for PCT filings, only China and India are middle-income countries, and
China is the only one that recorded double-digit annual growth – filing 13.4
percent more applications from a year before.
China has posted double-digit
annual growth rates in PCT applications since 2003. In 2017, its export of IP
royalties exceeded $4 billion for the first time.
China upgraded the protection of
intellectual property right (IPR) to a national strategy after it released the
National Intellectual Property Strategy in 2008, effectively pushing the
country a step closer to a business environment that is more fair, transparent
and predicable.
In order to optimize management
efficiency, the country restructured its intellectual property administration
last August to centralize the management of patents, appearance designs,
trademarks, geographical indications, and layout designs of integrated circuit.
Given the fundamental role IP plays in
the process of building Belt and Road, China has devoted proactive efforts on
such cooperation when implementing the initiate.
A joint initiative to intensify IP
cooperation among en-route countries was released by the first High-level
Conference on Intellectual Property for Countries along the Belt and Road held
in Beijing in July 2016, during which a mechanism on IP cooperation was
established as well.
During the first Belt and Road Forum for
International Cooperation (BRF) held in 2017, an agreement on enhancing Belt
and Road intellectual property cooperation between China and the WIPO was
inked, endowing more international significance to IP cooperation along the
route.
Commissioner Shen Changyu of China
National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA) noted at the second
High-level Conference on Intellectual Property for Countries along the Belt and
Road last August that all the IP cooperation projects within the framework has
been put into implementation under joint efforts.
China’s rise to the world’s second
largest source of PCT applications, as well as its high annual growth
illustrate that its IP royalties now have more weight in international society.
WIPO’s director general Francis Gurry,
also as signatory of the agreement on enhancing Belt and Road intellectual
property cooperation between the WIPO and China, said in a recent interview
with Chinese media that different from traditional trade pacts and cooperation
models, the Belt and Road is more about strengthening the capacity of the Belt
and Road countries in trade and business cooperation, and intellectual property
plays a vital role in such capacity building.
Chinese leadership lays great emphasis
on the role of intellectual property in an innovation-driven contemporary
economy, and all other economic spheres, said the WIPO head, who signed the
deal when attending the first BRF.
The deal also marks the first agreement
between the Chinese government and an international organization regarding the
IP cooperation among Belt and Road countries.
Gurry believes that Chinese experiences
also indicated the country’s long-term commitment to intellectual property,
which is an important reference for other countries.
As the chief of the UN institution to
protect IP registration and encourage innovation, Gurry also pledged an active
engagement of WIPO in the China-proposed BRI.
The head, who will soon kick off his
journey to Beijing to attend the second BRF, also hoped China can share more of
its experiences in intellectual property with the Belt and Road countries, so
as to propel intellectual property undertakings and economic prosperity of
these countries.
Fuxing bullet trains are exhibited at
the China Railway Science and Technology Innovation Achievement Exhibition,
December 25, 2018. The exhibition was opened at the China National Railway
Track Test Centre, Beijing on December 24, 2018. The exhibition, hosted by
China Railway Corporation, displayed a batch of advanced railway technologies
and equipment independently developed by China, including the 17-carriage
Fuxing bullet train running at 350-KPH, 8-carriage Fuxing bullet train running
at 250-KPH, and a Fuxing model with a centralized power system that runs at 160
KPH. In addition, the new coatings for the high speed trains running on the
Beijing-Zhangjiakou Railway were also unveiled for the first time at the
exhibition. (Photo by People’s Daily Online)
Intellectual property cooperation assists Belt and Road construction
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