https://www.epo.org/en/about-us/services-and-activities/international-european-cooperation/international-bilateral/reinforced-partnership-programme

Reinforced Partnership programme

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The EPO's Reinforced Partnership programme seeks to further integrate and strengthen the global patent system by providing our partner offices with direct access to the work products produced by our 4 300 highly qualified and specialised patent examiners. This in turn will improve conditions for applicants filing patents internationally and foster innovation by supporting the partner offices in providing improved services to local applicants.

Reinforced partnership is a flexible co-operation model adapted to the specific needs and priorities of our partner offices. It is implemented through a comprehensive technical co-operation programme comprising:

  • specialised training in the reuse of EPO work products for substantive search and examination
  • access to the EPO's latest search solutions and work‑sharing tools
  • integration of national patent data and access to the EPO's worldwide prior‑art collection
  • expert exchanges and sharing of best practices in areas of mutual interest
  • capacity-building on patents for local stakeholders.

Supporting the national innovation ecosystem

National patents granted to non-residents are a stimulus for foreign direct investment and technology transfer, provided that investors can rely on the legal certainty attached to the granted patents and applicants on the ability to enforce their rights. The legal certainty attached to patents of foreign origin is also important for local innovators and potential competitors as they must have clarity on the granted scope of protection to avoid developing technologies that infringe the rights of others.

By contrast, national patent applications filed by residents are usually the product of local research and development, and the national patent system is expected to act as a catalyst for converting the commercial potential of these inventions into socio-economic development. The legal certainty attached to these patent applications and patents is essential to allow domestic patent proprietors to reap the full benefits from their inventions, whether in terms of commercialisation through licensing for instance, successfully preventing others from copying the invention or protecting it in foreign markets.

Patent applications filed by residents are usually "first filings" because the applicant has not yet filed patent applications for the same invention in other jurisdictions. Timeliness is an essential factor for first filings as applicants need to know whether their invention is patentable as soon as possible after the date of filing, and before the expiry of the 12-month priority period. They need early certainty regarding the patentability of their invention in order to take informed decisions on the further development of it, and possibly whether to extend the protection to other jurisdictions, in other words, to develop exports and foreign trade.

However, first filings normally require patent offices to carry out the substantive search and examination on patentability from scratch as there are no family members to consult. Hence, they are usually more time-consuming and complex to examine than second filings, where related work products from other patent offices often exist. Furthermore, many national patent offices face capacity constraints and do not have enough qualified patent examiners to examine the growing range of technology.

Enhancing the patent grant process through the effective reuse of EPO work products

At many patent offices, second filings represent the majority of national patent applications. Through reinforced partnership, partner offices can substantially increase their productivity and timeliness in examining second filings by effectively reusing our work products. Since many second filings often have corresponding EP family members for which we have already produced search and examination results, frequently in our role as International Searching Authority and International Preliminary Examination Authority under the PCT, the impact of reuse under the Reinforced Partnership programme is particularly high. Furthermore, since our patent examiners are highly qualified and specialised, work in divisions of three and cover the entire range of technology, our work products are of particularly high quality and therefore provide a very reliable basis for examining related second filings across all technical fields. However, it should be noted that partner offices always perform the substantive examination in line with their own national/regional legal frameworks and independently decide on the grant or refusal of a patent application.  

As a result of the increase in capacity, our partner offices can devote more examination resources to first filings and prioritise them in terms of timeliness and quality. Their examiners can focus on guiding resident applicants through the patent grant process and provide specialised services to the local user community. They can also participate in IP awareness and capacity-building initiatives organised by the national IP authorities for local stakeholders. 

For more details on the Reinforced Partnership programme's reuse scheme, please refer to the FAQ.

What our partners gain

  • A long-term strategic partnership based on a shared vision to co‑operate in the further development of the patent system as a catalyst for innovation, technology transfer and socio‑economic development.
  • Enhanced access, both technically and substantively, to the work products produced by our 4 300 highly qualified and specialised patent examiners
  • A bespoke reuse procedure in line with the national/regional legal framework to enhance available search and examination capacities through the smart utilisation of the EPO's work products.
  • Access to patent examiners for exchanges on know-how, experiences and best practices and to specialised training, for instance, in emerging technological fields, examination of first filings, classification and on EPO search and examination tools.
  • Privileged access to the EPO's latest search solutions, IT tools and prior-art databases.
  • Access to train-the-trainer programmes to raise IP awareness and increase local capacities for the effective use of the patent system.
  • Access to exchange programmes between experts from both offices and participation in each other's public events and conferences.

What the users gain

  • Both resident and non-resident applicants benefit from increased predictability, timeliness and ultimately legal certainty in the patent grant process.
  • Users benefit from the enhanced capacities and capabilities of the partner offices in terms of the patent prosecution process.
  • Regular consultations and sharing of information on the implementation of the Reinforced Partnership programme to meet user needs.
  • Various technical assistance measures co-organised with the partner offices, ranging from training of patent attorneys to introducing IP teaching at universities.
  • Integrated access to partner office patent data and legal status information via the EPO's patent information products and tools such as Espacenet.

Reinforced Partnership agreements

Since 2018, the EPO has concluded thirteen Reinforced Partnership agreements with IP offices from twelve countries and one regional IP organisation, namely Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, Peru, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Ukraine and the African Regional Intellectual Property Organization (ARIPO). The network of partner offices is expected to grow significantly in the years to come.

Further information

FAQ and information on partner offices