Eurasian Patent Convention Explained

Eurasian Patent Convention
Location Signed:Moscow, Russia
Date Effective:12 August 1995
Condition Effective:Ratification by three States
Signatories:10
Parties:8 (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Russia, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan)
Depositor:Director-General of WIPO
Language:Russian

The Eurasian Patent Convention (EAPC; Russian: Евразийская патентная конвенция) is an international patent law treaty instituting both the Eurasian Patent Organization (EAPO) and the legal system pursuant to which Eurasian patents are granted.[1] It was signed on 9 September 1994 in Moscow, Russia, and entered into force on 12 August 1995.[2] [3]

History

After the Collapse of the Soviet Union, its successor states had no system for protection of intellectual property. A common patent system was conceived in a convention which was signed on 27 December 1991, but never entered into force.[2] This system would provide for a true unitary patent that "may be granted, assigned or canceled in the territory of all the Contracting States with due regard to the invention patentability criteria provided for in the USSR legislation". The second version of the convention went less far: in line with the European Patent Convention,[3] it provided for a single evaluation phase, but after approval, it would be converted in a bundle of national patents.

States parties

The convention was signed by 10 states in 1994, 8 of which became members one year later upon ratification.[4]

CountrySignatureRatification/AccessionDenunciation
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Georgia
Kazakhstan
Kyrgyzstan
Tajikistan
Turkmenistan
Ukraine

Opposition

An opposition can be filed against a Eurasian patent granted under the provisions of the Eurasian Patent Convention within six months from the publication of the granted patent.[3]

Statistics

"Between 1996 and the end of 2015, approximately 43 700 Eurasian applications were filed and 22 700 Eurasian patents were granted at the EAPO."[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Eurasian Patent Convention. Eurasian Patent Organization. 19 June 2016.
  2. Web site: History of the Eurasian patent organization. Eurasian Patent Organization. 2 July 2012.
  3. June 2016. Accessing patent information published in Russia – Part 1: Eurasian Patent Office. Patent Information News. European Patent Office. 2016. 2. 12–14. 19 June 2016. 3 February 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200203023822/http://documents.epo.org/projects/babylon/eponet.nsf/0/BB3248FC776D2A93C1257FD300318EC8/$File/patent_information_news_0216_en.pdf. dead.
  4. Web site: Treaty database: Eurasian Patent Convention (EAPO). WIPO. 3 July 2012.