Vapor
The 2019 edition of WIPO’s World Intellectual Property Report analyzed millions of patent and scientific publication records across several decades to conclude that innovative activity has grown increasingly collaborative and transnational, while originating in a few large clusters located in a small number of countries.
Some 30
metropolitan hotspots alone accounted for 69 percent of patents and 48
percent of scientific activity during the 2015-2017 period. They are
mostly located in five countries – China, Germany, Japan, the Republic
of Korea and the United States of America (U.S.).
The report
finds that innovation has become more collaborative. In the early 2000s,
teams of scientists produced 64 percent of all scientific papers and
teams of inventors were behind 54 percent of all patents. By the second
half of the 2010s, these figures had grown to almost 88 and 68 percent,
respectively.
Collaboration has also become more international in
nature. The share of scientific collaborations with two or more
researchers located in different countries grew to around 25 percent in
2017. For patents, the share of international co-inventions increased to
11 percent until 2009, but has since slightly fallen, partly because of
rapid growth in domestic collaborations in certain countries. Most
international collaboration takes place among the top metropolitan
hotspots. The largest ten of them – San Francisco-San Jose, New York,
Frankfurt, Tokyo, Boston, Shanghai, London, Beijing, Bengaluru, and
Paris – account for 26 percent of all international co-inventions. The
U.S. hotspots emerge as the most connected ones in the world.
“Today’s
innovation landscape is highly globally interlinked,” said WIPO
Director General Francis Gurry. “Increasingly complex technological
solutions for shared global challenges need ever larger and
more-specialized teams of researchers, which rely on international
collaboration. It is imperative that economies remain open in the
pursuit of innovation.”
Key findings
Some other key report findings:
•
Before 2000, Japan, the U.S. and Western European economies accounted
for 90 percent of patenting and more than 70 percent of scientific
publishing activity worldwide. These shares have fallen to 70 percent
and 50 percent, respectively, for the 2015-2017 period amid increased
activity in China, India, Israel, Singapore, the Republic of Korea,
among others.
• Multinational companies locate their research and
development (R&D) activities in hotspots that offer specialized
knowledge and skills. For example, Google’s headquarters in Silicon
Valley only account for somewhat less than half of the company’s
patenting activity, with Zurich, New York City and London showing as
other important sources of inventor locations.
• Multinational
companies from middle-income economies – such as Embraer and Infosys –
frequently ‘source’ innovation from the top hotspots in high-income
economies, but hardly do so from other middle-income economics.
•
There are notable differences in patterns of scientific and inventive
activity. Scientific activity is internationally more widespread. There
are many middle-income economies hosting universities and other research
organizations that generate large numbers of scientific publications –
often in collaboration with partners in the U.S. and Europe. However,
those economies account for relatively few patents. Generally,
international collaboration is more frequent in scientific publishing
than in patenting.
• The rise of highly successful innovation
hotspots has coincided with a growing inter-regional polarization of
incomes, high-skilled employment and wages within countries. While other
factors have contributed to such regional inequalities, regional
support and development policies can play an important role in helping
regions that have fallen behind.
Innovation reshapes the car industry: IT firms take their seats
The
report delves deeper into the global innovation landscape of two
industries undergoing profound change. One is the automotive sector,
where the adoption of autonomous vehicles technology is causing
disruption. New entrants – from within the automotive industry and from
the information technology (IT) industry – are challenging established
players.
Patent data suggest that traditional automakers and
their suppliers are at the forefront of autonomous vehicles innovation.
Ford, Toyota and Bosch – accounting for 357, 320 and 277 of A V patent
families, respectively – are the top three autonomous vehicles patent
applicants. However, non-automakers also feature in the list of top
patent applicants. Google, and its autonomous vehicles subsidiary Waymo,
are in eighth position with 156 patents, ahead of traditional
automakers like Nissan, BMW, Toyota and Hyundai. Tech companies Uber and
Delphi each have 62 A V patents and are jointly ranked 31st.
The
advent of autonomous vehicles technology is broadening the innovation
landscape, with several IT-focused hotspots – which traditionally were
not at the center of automotive innovation – gaining prominence. Both
automakers and IT firms still seem to favor home-based sites for their
innovation activities.
Crop biotech is conceived in urban labs and diffused to agricultural areas
The
report also studies trends in agricultural biotechnology. Most
scientific and inventive activity in crop biotechnology occurs in a few
economies. China, Germany, Japan, the Republic of Korea and the U.S.
account for more than 55 percent of all crop biotech articles and more
than 80 percent of all patents. Within those economies, innovation
occurs mostly in large metropolitan areas. Relative to other fields of
innovation, however, innovative activity is more geographically
widespread, spanning many countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia.
This partly reflects the need to adapt innovations to local conditions.
Four
private firms perform a large part of the of R&D investment in
plant biotechnology – Bayer Cropscience, BASF, ChemChina and Corteva –
but there is an increasing need for collaboration with the public sector
to access pools of germplasms and cultivars held by public research
institutions. Since the 2000s, co-patenting between private firms and
public institutions has become the main type of collaboration overtaking
the co-patenting among private firms.
Source: WIPO Website
Editor:Vapor