In 2021, the number of patent applications submitted to the State Intellectual Property Office (hereinafter referred to as: SIPO) amounted to 88, of which 77 were filed by resident and 11 by non-resident applicants. Out of the total residents, 68.8% were submitted by natural persons, and 31.2% by legal entities, while, concerning the non-resident applicants, natural persons submitted 72.7% and legal entities 27.3% of applications.
The most applications related to mechanical engineering
As regards the fields of technology, the highest share of patent applications in 2021 is related to Mechanical engineering (37.0%) and Chemistry (30.1%), while the lowest number related to Instruments (9.2%).
The International Patent Classification (hereinafter referred to as: IPC) provides the identification of the technology base of patents as well as the sector in which they will probably be applied. According to the IPC codes, the highest share of patent applications in 2021 were recorded in section B Performing operations; transporting (28.4%) and the lowest one in section D Textiles; paper (1.2%).
In 2021, the total number of patents granted in the national procedure amounted to 58. Out of that number, there were 51 patents of resident and 7 of non-resident applicants. Out of the total number of patents granted in the national procedure, 66.7% were invented by natural persons and 33.3% by legal entities. Concerning the non-resident applicants, 85.7% of patents granted were invented by legal entities and 14.3% by natural persons.
The most granted patents were related to mechanical engineering
The highest share of granted patents in 2021 according to the field of technology was related to Mechanical engineering (35.8%), followed by Instruments (17.5%) and Chemistry (17.5%), while the lowest one was related to Electrical engineering (13.1%).
According to the IPC codes, the highest share of granted patents in 2021 was related to section A Human necessities (25.9%). The lowest share was related to section C Chemistry; metallurgy (3.4%), while there were no granted patents in section D Textiles; paper.
In 2021, there were 12 183 valid patents in the Republic of Croatia.
Two thirds of patent applications and more than three quarters of granted patents referred to resident applicants from Adriatic Croatia and the City of Zagreb
In 2021, out of the total number of patent applications of resident applicants, 33.8% were filed by applicants from Adriatic Croatia and 32.5% by applicants from the City of Zagreb.
Concerning granted patents in 2021, 39.2% of applicants came from Adriatic Croatia and 37.3 % from the City of Zagreb.
1 PATENT APPLICATIONS IN NATIONAL PROCEDURE, 2017 – 2021 |
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1) This is in accordance with the WIPO International Patent Classification concordance table. The sum of patents by fields of technology may be higher than the total number of patents because more than one IPC code may be assigned to a single patent. |
1) The data in the graph are recalculated for the whole time series according to HR_NUTS 2021. – HR NUTS 2 (NN, No. 125/19).
1) The data in the graph are recalculated for the whole time series according to HR_NUTS 2021. – HR NUTS 2 (NN, No. 125/19).
2 PATENTS GRANTED IN NATIONAL PROCEDURE, 2017 – 2021 |
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1) This is in accordance with the WIPO International Patent Classification concordance table. The sum of patents by fields of technology may be higher than the total number of patents because more than one IPC code may be assigned to a single patent. |
3 VALID PATENTS IN REPUBLIC OF CROATIA, 2017 – 2021 |
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1) Including European patents validated in the Republic of Croatia. |
Data sources
The data are the result of the processing of data taken over from SIPO. It is a state administration body with responsibilities in the field of the protection of intellectual property rights. SIPO carries out procedures for granting industrial property rights (patents, trademarks, industrial designs, geographical indications and designations of origin, topographies of semiconductor products) and performs the accompanying professional and legislative activity.
The data have been compiled according to the defined set of tables and processed by applying the required methodology.
Objectives of the survey and coverage
The methodological basis for the implementation of the survey is the internationally acknowledged standard, which was set up and published in the OECD Patent Statistics Manual.
The patent statistics provide information on the success of the research, development and innovation activity in selected fields of technology. The number of patents is one of the measures of the inventive activity of a country that, in addition, displays the capacity to exploit the knowledge and translate it into potential economic gains. The International Patent Classification (IPC) enables the classification of patent applications and granted patents into the selected fields of technology. The patents are classified, according to the technical subject matter of the invention, into respective classes or subclasses. The Classification includes eight fields of technology (marked with letters A to H), broken down into subfields further divided into classes and subclasses.
The data presented in this First Release encompasses patent applications submitted to SIPO and patents granted by SIPO in the national.
The data are presented at the level of the Republic of Croatia, while G3 and G4 graphs present data for 5-year time series at the HR_NUTS 2021. – HR NUTS 2 level, according to the new National Classification of Statistical Regions (HR_NUTS 2021.; NN, No. 125/19).
Definitions and explanations
The definitions covering the patent statistics area are based on the international methodology – the OECD Patent Statistics Manual 2009, issued by OECD, Paris, 2009.
A patent is an exclusive right granted for an invention that offers a new technical solution to a problem. It is granted for inventions related to a product, procedure or application. The patent provides the exclusive right to the owner to make, use, distribute or sell the invention protected by the patent during a limited, generally 20 years from the filing date of the application. On expiration of this time, the patent is made a public good, available for public use.
The patent does not protect an abstract concept but an actual technical solution to a problem. The basic conditions for every invention that have to be fulfilled for granting of the patent are that it is new, that it involves an inventive step and that it is eligible for industrial application (that is, practical industrial applicability).
Patents are a territorial right, which means that they are valid only in the territory of a country where they were granted. Patents are granted by an authorised body, on the basis of the examination of the patent application that describes the invention. The authorised body in the Republic of Croatia is SIPO.
The patent granting procedure is instituted by filing the patent application and carried out in line with the Patent Act and Patent Regulations. It consists of two main phases, the formal examination of the text of the application prior to its publication in the SIPO official gazette and the examination after the publication. The procedure may result in the grant of a patent for a proposed invention, provided that the prescribed requirements are complied with, or in the refusal of a request for the grant of a patent, if such requirements are not complied with.
The patent applications are for the purpose of this First Release counted in a year when they were submitted to the SIPO, while the granted applications are counted in a year when they were granted by the SIPO.
Consensual patent is a special form of the patent protection in the Republic of Croatia. Its main characteristic is that it is granted without a substantive examination of the patent application, that is, on the basis of the public consensus, if no opposition to the grant is filed. The term of the consensual patent is no more than ten years.
Utility model is a form of invention protection that is registered without a substantive examination procedure of the patentability condition. The utility model can only protect products that do not belong in the field of biotechnology and that are not chemical or pharmaceutical substances. In addition, inventions whose commercial exploitation would be contrary to public policy or morality cannot be protected. Utility model lasts for 10 years, counting from the date of filing the application.
The process of registering a utility model is faster, cheaper and more suitable for simpler inventions as well as for natural persons and small and medium-sized enterprises, as compared to the procedure of granting a patent.
The definitions and explanations have been taken over from the web site of SIPO www.dziv.hr, where more information is available.
Abbreviations | |
HR_NUTS 2021. – HR NUTS 2 | National Classification of Statistical Regions, 2021 version – 2nd level statistical regions |
NN | Narodne novine, official gazette of the Republic of Croatia |
OECD | Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development |
WIPO | World Intellectual Property Organization |
Symbols | |
- | no occurrence |
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