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Accelerated Examination Green Technology Petition Pilot Program Robert W. Bahr Acting Associate Commissioner for Patent Examination Policy. Discussion Points. 1. Accelerated Examination (AE) 2. Green Technology Pilot Program. Accelerated Examination: Authority.
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Accelerated ExaminationGreen Technology Petition Pilot ProgramRobert W. Bahr Acting Associate Commissionerfor Patent Examination Policy
Discussion Points 1. Accelerated Examination (AE) 2. Green Technology Pilot Program
Accelerated Examination: Authority • 37 CFR § 1.102 and MPEP § 708.02 VIII • Effective August 25, 2006 • Petitions prior to this date are not included • See Changes to Practice for Petitions in Patent Applications to Make Special and for Accelerated Examination, 71 FR 36233 (June 26, 2006),1308 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 106 (July 18, 2006). • AE information on the USPTO web site: http://www.uspto.gov/patents/process/file/accelerated/index.jsp
Accelerated Examination: Overview • “Special” status: advances an application out of turn for examination • GOAL: achieve a final decision by the Examiner within 12 months from the filing date • Applies to all petitions to make special, except those related to: • Age and Health • Patent Prosecution Highway • Green Technology Pilot • Backlog Reduction Stimulus Plan
Accelerated Examination: Filing Requirements 1. Electronically Filed 2. Complete at filing 3. < 3/20 claims directed to a single invention 4. No multiple dependent claim(s) 5. Fee: 37 CFR § 1.17 (h) • or a statement that the claimed subject matter relates to environmental quality, energy or anti-terrorism 6. Petition to make special • use USPTO Form PTO/SB/28
Accelerated Examination: Common Filing Errors • Improper Filing: e.g., contains a preliminary amendment • Not In Condition for Examination: e.g., contains a a 37 CFR § 1.47 petition for a non-signing inventor • Untimely Filing: e.g., filed during mid-prosecution • Incomplete Filing • unexecuted oath • missing or defective drawings • missing or non-compliant sequence listings
Accelerated Examination: Filing Tips • Satisfy the Filing Requirements • For a Filing Date: Provide a specification, at least one claim and any required drawing - §§ 1.81(a) and 1.84 • For a Complete Filing: Include • the basic filing fee • an oath or declaration pursuant to § 1.63 • a correspondence address - § 1.33(a) • Avoid: • 37 CFR § 1.16(f) surcharge • Notice To File Missing Parts to address the above deficiencies • See MPEP § 601.01(a) ; 37 CFR § 1.53
Accelerated Examination: Filing Tips (Cont.) • Use an application data sheet (ADS) • in lieu of oath for foreign or domestic benefit claims • to effect cross-reference (37 CFR § 1.78) • For non-English specifications, timely provide English language translation under 37 CFR § 1.52(d), an accuracy statement and the fee • Include necessary Sequence Listing (if applicable)
Accelerated Examination: Petition Requirements • Petition must be accompanied by: • Pre-Examination Search • Accelerated Examination Support Document (AESD) • Statements that the applicant will: • Make election w/o traverse in a telephonic interview • Agree to have an interview when requested by the examiner • Not separately argue any dependent claim on appeal • See: Form PTO/SB/28, Petition to Make Special Under Accelerated Examination Program at: http://www.uspto.gov/patents/process/file/efs/guidance/Form_fillable_pdfs_available.jsp
Accelerated Examination: Pre-Exam Search • Must include a search of: • U.S. Patents • Patent application publications • Foreign patent documents • Non-patent literature • Search directed to the claimed invention giving claims their broadest reasonable interpretation • Include a classification search and text search
Accelerated Examination: Deficient Pre-Exam Search • Petition Dismissed: if partially deficient • Will include specifics regarding deficiency with suggestions to remedy Example: Missing or Incomplete Search • Missing: point out that search is required • Incomplete: guidance directed at improving the search will be given in the decision
Accelerated Examination: Common Search Errors • Incomplete Search: • substantive: does not address key claim limitations • procedural: does not include foreign patent search - does not document USPAT search terms
Accelerated Examination: Search Tips • Search the claimed invention • search must be commensurate in scope with the claims • Search should include U.S. Patents and publications, foreign patents and publications, and non-patent literature • Provide the text search logic • a listing of terms will not suffice
Accelerated Examination: Examination Support Document (AESD) Requirements • AESD must include: 1. An information disclosure statement (IDS) citing each reference deemed most closely related to the claims 2. An identification of where each limitation disclosed in each reference is found • Refer to specific paragraphs or drawing elements 3. A detailed explanation of how each claim is patentable over each reference • Be specific – general statements are not sufficient
AE: AESD Requirements (Cont.) • AESD must also include: 4. A concise statement of utility of the invention. 5. A showing of support for each claim limitation in specification • Point to page and line numbers or drawing elements 6. An identification of any cited references that may be disqualified as prior art under 35 U.S.C. § 103(c)
Accelerated Examination: Common AESD Errors • Form PTO/SB/08 (formerly PTO-1449) fails to include reference(s) discussed in the AESD • Fail to apply reference(s) to claim limitations • Fail to provide a detailed explanation of how each claim is patentable over each reference
Accelerated Examination: AESD Tips • Clearly point out by specific claim language how each claim is patentable over each reference • Each reference discussed must be presented in an IDS • Show support in the specification and/or drawings for each limitation of each claim. Be specific • Clearly and specifically identify the limitations in each claim • A chart is a clear, convenient format
Accelerated Examination: Petition Review • Denied if: • Fails to meet filing requirements • Ineligible (plant, reissue, reexamination proceeding, national stage application under 35 U.S.C. § 371) • Dismissed if it is defective • Defects are specifically noted • One (1) chance to cure • Ultimately Denied if: • Applicant is unable to timely cure defect(s)
Accelerated Examination: Applicant’s Reply • Shorter Statutory Periods (SSP) for applicant reply: • 1-month (or 30 days) for any action except final rejection or allowance • No time extensions under 37 CFR § 1.136(a) – only § 1.136(b) • Reply must be electronically filed via EFS-Web • If response includes either amended or newly-added claims: • An updated search will be required if claims are not encompassed by the pre-examination search • An updated AESD will be required if claims are not encompassed by original AESD
Accelerated Examination: Non-Responsive Reply An amendment (including after-final and RCE submissions) is non-responsive (not entered) if it: • Exceeds the 3/20 claim limit; • Presents claims to a non-elected invention; • Presents claims not encompassed by the pre-examination search, or an updated search; or • Presents claims requiring an updated AE support document, which is not submitted.
Accelerated Examination: Non-Responsive Reply (Cont.) • Must respond timely: • Examiner may provide one month (or 30 days) to supply the omission or a fully responsive reply for a bona-fide response to FAOM only • No extensions under 37 CFR § 1.136(a) • Abandoned if not timely cured
Accelerated Examination: Withdrawal From Special Status • No AE provision for “withdrawal” from special status • An RCE will not effect “withdrawal” • Can abandon in favor of a “continuation” which is not special unless a new AE petition is filed with the continuation application and granted
Accelerated Examination: Statistics Overview * As of 1/7/10 (Statistics are calculated on a quarterly basis.)
Accelerated Examination: Statistics Overview Cumulative AE Petitions Decided on Merits or Pending (Applications filed through 12/31/09, N=2811) Status as of 1/7/10
Accelerated Examination: Benefits • Final patentability determination in 12 months • Good for inventions with a short lifespan • Patent may be granted at the peak of the technology’s life • Benefits inventions in very competitive markets • Information provided more quickly to those seeking to avoid infringement • Can be used to accelerate prolonged prosecution • Claim drafting is more focused and clear • Earlier and extended interaction between applicant and examiner
Accelerated ExaminationInformation Links • AE Home Page:http://www.uspto.gov/web/patents/accelerated • AE Federal Register Notice:http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/sol/notices/71fr36323.pdf • Sample AE Petition Form SB/2B:http://www.uspto.gov/web/forms/sb0028_fil.pdf • Sample AE Pre-Examination Search Document:http://www.uspto.gov/web/patents/accelerated/ae_presearch_sample.doc • Sample AE Support Document:http://www.uspto.gov/web/patents/accelerated/ae_support_document_sample.doc • FAQs:http://www.uspto.gov/web/patents/accelerated/ae_faq.htm
Green Technology Pilot Program Discussion Points 1. Authority and Overview: resources/overview 2. Petition Requirement: common errors and tips 3. Petition Review: process, statistics, examples 4. Future
Green Technology: Authority • See Pilot Program for Green Technologies Including Greenhouse Gas Reduction, 74 FR 64666 (Dec. 8, 2009), 1349 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 362 (Dec. 29, 2009). • Pilot was announced by Secretary Locke in Washington, DC – coinciding with the start of UN’s Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, Denmark • Part of the Obama Administration’s effort to spur innovation and create jobs • Green Tech Information on the USPTO web site: http://www.uspto.gov/patents/init_events/green_tech.jsp
Green Technology: Overview • Pilot will run for twelve months from its effective date of December 8, 2009 • Limited to specific areas of green technology • Environmental quality • Energy conservation • Development of renewable energy resources • Greenhouse gas emission reduction • Must meet USPC requirements set forth in the Federal Register Notice • Limited to the first 3,000 petitions granted by USPTO • “Special” status • Advances an application out of turn for initial examination • Accorded special status in any appeal to the BPAI and in the patent publication process
Green Technology: Filing Requirements • Non-reissue, non-provisional utility application filed under 35 USC § 111(a) or a 35 USC § 371 application • Application must have been filed prior to December 8, 2009 or be a 35 USC § 371 filing based on an international application filed prior to December 8, 2009 • Filed electronically via EFS-Web • Filed at least one day prior to the date that a first Office action appears in PAIR • Include a request for early publication in compliance with 37 CFR § 1.219 and the publication fee pursuant to 37 CFR § 1.18(d). Note that payment is required even if the application has already published
Green Technology: Filing Requirements (Cont.) • ≤3/20 claims directed to a single invention having no multiple dependent claims • State basis for special status and include a statement explaining how the materiality standard is met • Include a statement that the applicant agrees to make a telephonic election without traverse if a restriction requirement is made by the examiner • Application must be classified in one of the U.S. patent classifications (USPCs) set forth in the Federal Register Notice
Green Technology: Filing Requirements (Cont.) • USPC requirement includes subclasses in 58 distinct classification classes and encompasses seven TCs • Eligible classifications cover a wide range of green technologies • Some examples include: • Biofuel (USPC 44/589, 605) • Solar energy (USPC 126/561-714; 320/101) • Hybrid-powered vehicles (USPC 180/65.21-65.29; 73/35.01-35.13, 112-115, 116-119A, 121-132) • USPC requirement is purposefully narrow in order for the USPTO to balance the workload • The USPTO recognizes that many technologies could be considered “green” but are not included in the pilot
Green Technology: Common Filing Errors • USPC requirement not met • Accounts for >80% of dismissals to-date • Petition is missing the materiality statement • Petition does not include publication fee • Application filed after December 8, 2009
Green Technology: Filing Tips • Use of USPTO Form PTO/SB/420, Petition to Make Special Under the Green Technology Pilot Program, is strongly encouraged • Ensure that the USPC requirements are met • Contact SPE/examiner to correct erroneous USPC’s prior to filing petition • Include payment of publication fee • Must be paid even if application has been published
Green Technology: Petition Review • The Technology Centers are currently deciding all Green Technology petitions • Current goal is for an initial decision to be rendered within two weeks of petition receipt date • Applications must be in a docket-ready status, i.e., released by Office of Patent Application Processing (OPAP), in order for a decision to be rendered • A single request for reconsideration may be filed within 30 days of a decision dismissing the petition • Applicant may amend the claims and suggest a new USPC to overcome any initial USPC defect
Green Tech: Future • USPTO may extend the pilot program (with or without modifications) to extend longer than twelve months and/or include more than 3,000 granted petitions • Any extension will be announced by the USPTO via a written notice, i.e. a Federal Register or OG Notice. • Future suggestions regarding the Green Tech Petition Pilot should be directed to Pinchus Laufer (Pinchus.Laufer@uspto.gov) and Blaine Copenheaver (Blaine.Copenheaver@uspto.gov)