Posts Tagged ‘patents’

Green Technologies May Move To The Head Of The Line

Friday, December 11th, 2009

The United States Patent and Trademark Office has announced a pilot program for green technologies, including greenhouse gas reduction, environmental quality, energy conservation, development of renewable energy resources, or greenhouse gas emission reduction.

The requirements for this program can be found on page 2 of the attached PDF.

This program will allow an applicant with an application pertaining to green technologies to petition to advance the application out of turn for examination. This program began on December 8, 2009 and will run for 12 months so petitions must be filed before December 9, 2010.

Pilot Program for Green Technologies.pdf

Toyota and Greentech Patenting

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Researching the patent race between Toyota and everybody else, the Wall Street Journal reports….

Toyota Builds Thicket of Patents Around Hybrid To Block Competitors – WSJ.com: “‘Toyota’s patent-filing strategy has made it far too risky to copy the Prius without Toyota’s blessing,’ said Justin Blows, a patent attorney with Griffith Hack Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys in Australia.

In a recent study of intellectual property for hybrid vehicles, Mr. Blows found that Toyota has about 2,100 patents, nearly double that of its closest rival, Honda Motor Co. It is a fact that Toyota hasn’t been shy about promoting, as it did in its launch of the new Prius at the Detroit auto show in January.”

In our own review of specific technologies, Toyota is doing okay, but they’re not blowing everyone away.

For example, our study of battery temperature control listed Honda as #1, with Toyota weighing in at #6. Of course, one of the interlopers between #1 and #6 is Matsushita, which Toyota has been known to partner with.

In our study of motor control patents, Toyota indeed weighs in at #1, with Honda and Nissan following suit.

Toyota is massive and well run, but innovation is occurring at all of the competitors, and each seems to understand the importance of protection. For example, in the battery temperature control category, Ford is #2, and GM is #3. Strong showings from Detroit. In motor control patents, Ford is #4, and GM is #9.

Sample reports, and their content, can be viewed at www.sunlightresearch.com.