Source: EURLEX
Language: en
Format: md

[**Avis juridique important**](../../../editorial/legal_notice.htm)

*|*

# 91996E2542

**WRITTEN QUESTION No. 2542/96 by Amedeo AMADEO to the Commission. The internal market** 
  
*Official Journal C 072 , 07/03/1997 P. 0055*

  

WRITTEN QUESTION E-2542/96 by Amedeo Amadeo (NI) to the Commission (8 October 1996)

Subject: The internal market

Industrial property rights (patents, trade marks, design rights and utility models) play an important role in the Community's internal market in that they promote innovation by smoothing the path between the initial idea and the moment that idea is given concrete form.

Can the Commission guarantee that protection will be afforded only to utility models which meet the (a) absolute novelty, (b) industrial applicability, and (c) inventive step requirements laid down in Article 56 of the Patent Convention, or, should this prove too difficult or impossible to achieve, to models which represent a practical improvement in industrial terms with regard to existing techniques?

Joint answer to Written Questions E-2541/96, E-2542/96 and E-2543/96 given by Mr Monti on behalf of the Commission (30 October 1996)

The Commission shares the Honourable Member's view that rules which are simple and easily understood by users promote innovation, provide suitable protection for inventions and help to ensure that inventions are published. In July 1995 the Commission published a Green Paper on the protection of utility models in the single market. ((COM(95) 370. )) This was followed by wide-ranging consultations of interested parties and in October 1996 Parliament adopted the Añoveros Trias de Bes report on the subject. Before putting forward a legislative proposal on utility models, the Commission is planning on holding further contacts, in particular with representatives of the industries most closely concerned by technical innovation. It is in this context that the question of the information to be provided to business and industry on utility models will be approached. By virtue of the subsidiarity principle, however, a Community body is not necessarily best placed to meet the needs of businesses, which often voice concerns of a national, regional or local nature.

The Commission is familiar with the suggestions the Honourable Member has put forward regarding the content of a possible future legislative proposal on utility models. It has already expressed its support for those suggestions - in particular before committees of the Parliament - during talks on the adoption of the Añoveros Trias de Bes report.

The Commission notes that the European patents system is, to a large extent, harmonized. The fact that every Member State has acceded to the 1973 Munich Convention on the European patent and the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) has led to significant alignment of national patent laws. Nevertheless, as pointed out in the Green Paper on the protection of utility models in the single market, the Commission is looking into the possibility of supplementing the patents system through the introduction of specific legislation on utility models, since these often provide a quick and flexible means of protecting technical inventions.

[Top](#document1)