Patent applications in Europe rise, but women still under-represented

The number of patent applications at the European Patent Office (EPO) rose by almost 3% last year to 199,275 new inventions.

Digital communication, electrical machines and energy technology were the growth areas, the EPO said in Munich on Tuesday. Significantly more applications were received from South Korea and China in particular.

However, the US is still clearly in the lead with around 48,200 applications. Germany followed at a considerable distance with an increase of 1.4% to almost 25,000 applications. Japan was next with around 21,500, followed by China with 20,700, South Korea 12,600, France 10,800 and Switzerland with 9,400.

Most patent applications from Germany related to inventions in the fields of electrical machines/devices/energy, transport and vehicle technology as well as measurement technology, which includes sensors that are important for digitalization in industry.

As in the previous year, the Chinese IT and telecommunications group Huawei topped the list of companies filing EPO patent applications, with more than 5,000 submissions.

It was followed by the South Korean tech companies Samsung and LG, the US semiconductor manufacturer Qualcomm, and the Swedish mobile phone network supplier Ericsson.

Almost one in four patent applications in Europe is now filed by small companies with fewer than 250 employees.

EPO boss António Campinos said they benefited from the newly created Unitary Patent, which provides simple and cost-effective protection for inventions throughout the EU. From the launch of the Unitary Patent in June 2023 to the end of the year, 22% of patents granted were Unitary Patents.

The proportion of female inventors remains low. In only 27% of all patent applications from Europe was at least one woman named as an inventor. In Germany, the figure was 22%.