IP filings in 1st half rise YOY, exceeding pre-pandemic level

August 11, 2022

The Intellectual Property Office of the Philippines (IPOPHL) said applications for intellectual property (IP) registration increased in the first half of the year as COVID-19 restrictions eased and IPOPHL intensified its IP awareness and education campaign. 

Filings for patents, trademarks, utility models (UM) and industrial designs (ID) in January to June this year totaled 23,410, increasing by 1.6% from the 23,048 filings in the comparable period of 2021, surpassing by nearly 2% the 22,968 registered in the first half of 2019 — IPOPHL’s record year for IP applications.

Trademarks registered the biggest increase at 2.9% with 20,300 filings, of which residents accounted for 62% or 12,514. Meanwhile, non-residents brought in 7,786.

Bulk of trademark filings were in pharmaceutical, health and cosmetic products (with 6,145 counts), followed by agricultural products and services (5,403) and scientific research, information and communication technology (4,697). 

Patents saw a 0.10% increase with 1,949 applications, 90% of which are driven by non-residents with 1,747 filings. The top fields for patent applications were in pharmaceuticals (1,272); organic fine chemistry (571); and biotechnology (370).

However, UM filings fell by 21.7% to 622 as resident filings, which contributed 94% to UM applications, dropped by 23.3% year-on-year.

Most of the UMs filed were in fields of food chemistry (211); other special machines (43); and information technology methods for management (39).

ID filings — shored up largely by non-resident filers with a 285 or 53% share — also slipped 8.02% to 539. Top industries for ID applications were in means of transport or hoisting (62); packages and containers for the transport or handling of goods (39); and furnishing (30).

Meanwhile, copyright deposits and recordation surged by 129% to 1,722. Most of the deposits fell under the categories of other literary, scholarly, scientific and artistics works (536); books, pamphlets, articles, e-books, audio books, comics, novels, and other writings (386); and photographic works (191).

“The increase in the first half is reflective of the eased COVID-19 restrictions that reignited economic activities and IPOPHL’s amplified awareness and education initiatives,” Director General Rowel S. Barba said. 

“With our ongoing and upcoming programs and projects to incentivize IP creation, protection and commercialization, IPOPHL hopes to sustain momentum in inspiring Filipinos’ deeper appreciation of the benefits of IP. We also hope to encourage more innovative and creative intellectual endeavors this year to help propel a resilient, inclusive and faster recovery of our economy,” Barba added.

 

September 23, 2019 / Featured, News, Press Release

NCIPR Seizes About P13.73B Worth of Counterfeit Goods in Jan-July 2019

NCIPR Seizes About P13.73B Worth of Counterfeit Goods in Jan-July 2019 Published on September 24, 2019 The National Committee on...
Read More
September 18, 2019 / Featured, News

MaSci’s Deep Respect for IP Enriches Students’ Innovations

MaSci's Deep Respect for IP Enriches Students' InnovationsSeptember 18, 2019 The Philippine Development Plan 2017-2022 flagged Intellectual Property Awareness as one...
Read More
September 16, 2019 / Featured, News, Press Release

IP Filings for H1 2019 Increase 11% Year-Over-Year

IP Filings for H1 2019 Increase 11% Year-Over-YearPublished on September 16, 2019 Application for registration of Intellectual Property (IP) assets filed...
Read More
September 12, 2019 / Announcements, Featured

Call for Proposals on Amendments to the Special Rules on IP Litigation

 Call for Proposals on Amendments to the Special Rules on IP LitigationPublished on September 12, 2019 The Intellectual Property Office of...
Read More