Patent Law Treaty

The Patent Law Treaty (PLT) is a treaty signed on 1 June 2000 in Geneva, Switzerland, by 53 States and the European Patent Organisation (an intergovernmental organization). It entered into force on April 28, 2005. It aims at harmonizing and streamlining formal procedures such as the requirements to obtain a filing date for a patent application, the form and content of a patent application, and representation. The treaty "does not establish a uniform procedure for all parties to the PLT but leaves parties free to require fewer or more user-friendly requirements than those provided in the PLT."[1] As of February 2023, the PLT had 43 contracting states.[2]

History

Contracting States to the Patent Law Treaty and dates of entry into force[2]
Date State
28 April 2005Republic of Moldova, Kyrgyz Republic, Republic of Slovenia, Slovak Republic, Federal Republic of Nigeria, Ukraine, Republic of Estonia, Kingdom of Denmark, Republic of Croatia, Romania
15 December 2005Bahrain
6 March 2006Finland
22 March 2006United Kingdom (including the Isle of Man)
19 July 2006Uzbekistan
16 October 2007Oman
27 December 2007Sweden
12 March 2008Hungary
1 July 2008Switzerland
16 March 2009Australia
12 August 2009Russia
18 December 2009Liechtenstein
5 January 2010France
22 April 2010North Macedonia
17 May 2010Albania
12 June 2010Latvia
20 August 2010Serbia
27 December 2010Netherlands (the whole Kingdom, except Aruba)
19 October 2011Kazakhstan
3 February 2012Lithuania
9 March 2012Montenegro
9 May 2012Bosnia and Herzegovina
27 May 2012Ireland
3 August 2013Saudi Arabia
17 September 2013Armenia
18 December 2013United States
11 June 2016Japan
21 October 2016Belarus
4 January 2017Liberia
22 August 2018North Korea
25 June 2019Antigua and Barbuda
30 October 2019Canada
19 July 2021Turkmenistan

France

Prior to the entry into force of the treaty in France, a bill was submitted on 14 January 2009 at the French Senate proposing the ratification of the PLT by France.[3][4] In March 2009, a report from French Senator Rachel Mazuir recommended the ratification of the PLT, as soon as possible, by France.[5][6] On 24 July 2009, the government was authorized to ratify the PLT.[7] The PLT then entered into force for France on 5 January 2010.[2]

United States

The Treaty was transmitted from the President to the Senate in 2006. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee issued its Executive Report 110-6 in November 2007. Non-self-executing portions of the PLT were implemented as statute by the Patent Law Treaties Implementation Act of 2012, Pub. Law 112-211 (Dec. 12, 2012). The PLT was ratified by the United States on 18 September 2013, and the ratification instrument was forwarded to WIPO. The Patent Office's implementing regulations were proposed at 78 Fed. Reg. 21788 (Apr. 11, 2013) and issued as a Final Rule at 78 Fed. Reg. 62367 (Oct. 21, 2013).

Mexico

Article 20(7)(3) of the proposed new NAFTA, in December 2019, stated that "Each Party shall give due consideration to ratifying or acceding to the PLT, or, in the alternative, shall adopt or maintain procedural standards consistent with the objective of the PLT".[8]

See also

References

Further reading

  • Mulder, Cees (November 2014). "Patent Law Treaty: Promises Not Delivered-How the Negotiations Resulted in Ambiguities in the Treaty: Patent Law Treaty". The Journal of World Intellectual Property. 17 (5–6): 160–190. doi:10.1002/jwip.12028.
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