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Amendment to the Patent Law adopted by China's top legislature over the weekend strengthened protection for patent holders, stipulated harsher punishment for violators and encouraged innovation in the pharmaceutical sector.
The amended law, passed by the National 
People's Congress Standing Committee on Saturday, aims to provide a 
long-term mechanism for combating patent infringement, promoting 
high-quality development and solving new problems that emerge.
The
 law, for example, clarifies that courts can demand violators pay 
compensation ranging from 30,000 yuan to 5 million yuan ($4,500 to 
$747,000) when the loss to patent holders, the benefit gained by 
violators or the patent license fee cannot be determined.
If 
someone is found to have intentionally and seriously harmed others' 
patents, compensation will be capped at five times the loss suffered, 
the benefit received or the patent license fee.
The amended law will come into effect on June 1.
"Increasing
 the punishments or improving the infringement cost is a bigger threat 
to violators and will make them pay a heavy price, which also shows our 
country's determination to strictly protect intellectual property," said
 Wang Ruihe, an official from the NPC Standing Committee's Legislative 
Affairs Commission.
To ensure patients can be supplied with safe 
and effective drugs in a timely manner, the law now includes more 
stipulations designed to protect drug-related patents.
For 
instance, it provides a legal basis for the early settlement of disputes
 over pharmaceutical patents, allowing patent holders and those seeking 
market approval for a drug to initiate a lawsuit during the approval 
process to get a verdict on whether a drug's technical composition 
infringes on others' patents.
"The move is to help solve disputes
 as soon as possible before a patent goes on the market, and to better 
balance the interests of patent holders and enterprises producing 
generic drugs. It is also to help patients obtain drugs quickly and 
further guarantee public health," said Song Jianhua, head of the 
National Intellectual Property Administration's treaty and law division.
"Drug
 developers spend a lot on research, so intellectual property rights in 
the industry should be strongly protected, particularly as sustained 
innovation will help us continue to obtain safe medicines and fight 
diseases."
Cao Jianming, a vice-chairman of the NPC Standing 
Committee, also lauded the new content on drug-related patents, saying 
the amendments will prove essential in safeguarding patent holders' 
legitimate rights, stimulating economic growth and improving 
high-quality development.
Chinese legislators have stepped up the
 review of IP-related draft laws or amendments in recent years. A 
revised Trademark Law came into effect in November, and an amendment to 
the Copyright Law was submitted to the top legislature in August.
Source: China Daily
Author:Cao Yin
Editor:Vapor