European Patent Office President António Campinos visited Tbilisi for high-level meetings and a joint conference with Georgia’s National Intellectual Property Center, Sakpatenti, focused on the role of patents in technology transfer.
During the visit, Campinos met Georgia’s Minister of Education, Science and Youth, Givi Mikanadze. Discussions covered the contribution of patent systems to economic development, innovation policy, international technology cooperation, and Georgia’s alignment with European patent practices.
The meetings also highlighted cooperation between the European Patent Office and Sakpatenti, including Georgia’s validation agreement with the EPO, which the statement says has resulted in more than 300 validation requests in two years. Mikanadze said:
‘The validation agreement supports IP development in Georgia by establishing an environment where knowledge transforms into innovation.‘
At the conference, titled ‘From Research to Impact: The Role of Patents in Technology Transfer’, Campinos said:
‘Technology transfer, foreign investment, and the development of new technologies depend on strong research, skilled intellectual property professionals, and solid legal frameworks. Patents and our validation agreement, by providing legal certainty, predictability, and clear professional standards, support researchers, universities, businesses of all sizes, and individual inventors in moving ideas from the laboratory to the market.‘
The programme also addressed professional qualifications and patent skills, with the EPO highlighting certification frameworks such as the European Qualifying Examination and the European Patent Administration Certification.
Why does it matter?
Stronger patent cooperation can affect how easily research moves into commercial use, how attractive a market is for technology investment, and how predictable protection is for innovators operating across borders. In Georgia, the validation agreement is presented as part of a broader effort to strengthen the country’s innovation ecosystem and its links with European patent practice.
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