What has happened since the introduction of EPC 2000?

EPC 2000 came into effect on 13 December 2007, as a result of the first major amendment of the European Patent Convention since its introduction in 1973. The most important reasons for the revision were adaptation to and harmonisation with international law (in particular TRIPS and PLT), modernisation and increased flexibility. A result of this was that the EPC became more user-friendly. EPC 2000 contains several provisions that did not exist before.

So what impact have these new provisions had on new European patents and applications? The EPO recently released new statistics on EP applications (covering the period from 13 December 2007 to 8 June 2008). These figures show, among other things, that:

Another new provision in EPC 2000 worth mentioning is the petition for review by the Enlarged Board of Appeal. So far, four petitions for review have been filed (two of these have been filed recently and are therefore not included in the statistics released by the EPO), and the first decision, in case R 1/08, was issued only a couple of weeks ago, on 15 July. The decision reads: “The petition for review is clearly not allowable”. From the reasoning presented by the Enlarged Board of Appeal it seems as if petition for review will be allowed only in exceptional cases, which was what most European patent attorneys anticipated from the start. For example, the Enlarged Board of Appeal states in R 1/08 that “[t]he extraordinary nature of this remedy [i.e. the petition for review] means that the provisions or Article 112a EPC are to be applied in a strictly-limited fashion”. It will be very interesting to follow the outcome of the other three pending cases and of any new petitions, to see what will be required to have a petition for review allowed.

Of course it’s too early for any deep analysis of the impact of EPC 2000, but I venture to argue that it seems that the new EPC provisions work as they were intended. And I also think that the users of the European patent system will benefit from the increased flexibility that the revised EPC affords.

Maria Stenbäck, European Patent Attorney

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