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This Is Robotics: Radio News

Global Robotics Patents: The Patent Wars!

Who is leading, who is on the rise, and who are the also-rans?

“Patent activity is one useful indicator of technological advancement in robotics. Designed to protect invention and intellectual property, patents are a linkage between science, technology, and commercial activity.

“Trends in patenting provide information about the vibrancy and dynamism of the broader innovation ecosystem. Invention and innovation is not a zero-sum game, and the transfer and diffusion of certain technologies can have economic and societal benefits across national borders.”
                                                                                                  —Trends in Robotics Patents, Center for Security and Emerging Technology

Patent activity is a useful indicator of technological progress and innovation in robotics. “Between 2005 and 2019, 72,618 robotics patents were granted worldwide.” Who is leading, who is on the rise, and who are the also-rans?

In other words, the patent wars! Who’s winning? Let’s take a look.

Georgetown University’s The Center for Security and Emerging Technology is out with its 2021  Global Overview and Trends in Robotics Patents. Covering the years 2005 to 2019.

The Center uses a wide net to cover robotics patents filed across 88 countries, using databases from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, the European Patent Office, and the World Intellectual Property Organization, known as WIPO.

“China has become the clear global leader in the total number of robotics patents issued, says a recent article from NextGov, “with nearly triple the number of robotics patents granted per year as the United States.”

The nonpartisan think-tank found China accounted for more than 25,000, or almost 35% of the global robotics patents…nearly three times more than the 9,500 robotics patents for the U.S.  The U.S. ranked fourth among nations, coming in behind China’s 25,000, Japan’s 15,000 and Korea’s 11,000 in total number of robotics patents issued since 2005.

“While the U.S. once dominated the global share of robotics patents issued,” says the report, “China reversed that trend a decade ago with its Made in China 2025 plan and is not slowing down its pace of robotics innovation. In 2019, China captured 5,400 robotics patents, or a 43% share of global robotics patents; conversely, the U.S. issued 2,100, or 17% of global robotics patents.

 

 

The report further states: “China tops the chart in patents for industrial robotics, transportation, humanoid/ exoskeleton, agriculture, underwater applications, and education. The United States leads in robotics patents in areas such as aerospace, medical, military/security, and telepresence, as well as robotics patents with AI features.

For the European Union, Germany leads with just under 5% with 3,439; the European Patent Office at 942 has a 1.3% share of the total.

The report’s authors argue changes in the ways the U.S. federal government addresses emerging technologies will be critical to the U.S. fostering more robotics innovation.  

Here’s an interesting note: “The study indicates China [partly] grew its patent output by offering incentives to investors, companies and universities, including decreased tax rates for companies with a certain number of robotics patents.”

PDF download of the entire report, Global Overview and Trends in Robotics Patents, please see the current issue of Asian Robotics Review for November’s Black Friday Special of This Is Robotics: Radio News.

Full podcast: This Is Robotics: Radio News, Episode #4 (November):

PITTSBURGH: HOW ROBOTICS SAVED A CITY
The fall and rise of Pittsburgh.

By 2000, 29 steel companies in Pittsburgh had declared bankruptcy, cratering its middleclass, and any future upon which the great city might have had hopes to grow and thrive. How did robotics bring the city back from the dead?
Pittsburgh: From Dying Steel Town to Global Robotics Hub by Henry Lenard

IS THIS THE GOLDEN AGE OF AMRS?
Unless you’ve been under a rock somewhere, you’ve undoubtedly heard the noise of their wheels and the rush of their whizzing by you, either on TV news, YouTube, or better, in person. What you’re seeing and hearing is the future arriving in a hurry. They’re called AMRs, robotics newest celebrities, autonomous mobile robots.

GLOBAL ROBOTICS PATENTS: THE PATENT WARS!
Patent activity is a useful indicator of technological progress and innovation in robotics. “Between 2005 and 2019, 72,618 robotics patents were granted worldwide.” Who is leading, who is on the rise, and who are the also-rans?
In other words, the patent wars! Who’s winning? Let’s take a look.

THREE BREAKTHROUGHS: CAPSULE ROBOTICS, THE ALL-ROBOT AUTO PLANT, AND THE DEXTEROUS, FIVE-FINGERED COBOT HAND
Instrument-free, noninvasive diagnosis and therapy inside the digestive tract will be performed through a new branch of robotics: capsule robotics.

In Japan, it seems that only “smart” robots need apply for work at Nissan’s brand new “intelligent” auto plant.

What’s the next big breakthrough tech for the cobot. How about a dexterous, sophisticated five-fingered hand?