Supplementary protection certificate

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Intellectual property law
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Primary rights
Sui generis rights
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In European Union member countries, a supplementary protection certificate (SPC) is a sui generis, patent-like, intellectual property right. This type of right is available for medicinal products, such as drugs, and plant protection products, such as insecticides, and herbicides.

A supplementary protection certificate comes into force only after the corresponding patent expires. It has a maximum life time of 5 years. The market exclusivity cannot however exceed 15 years. It may be viewed as an extension of life time of a patent, although the rights are somewhat different.

Supplementary protection certificates were introduced to compensate for the long time needed to obtain regulatory approval of these products (i.e. authorization to put these products on the market).

Applications for a supplementary protection certificate must be filed on a country-by-country basis. There is no unitary European supplementary protection certificate, but national ones only.

Contents

[edit] Determination of term

The term of an SPC depends on the date of issuance of the first market authorisation within the EEA:

  • If the first market authorisation is issued less than five years after the filing date of the corresponding patent, no SPC is granted.
  • If the first market authorisation is issued more than five years but less than ten years after the filing date of the corresponding patent, an SPC is granted for a term corresponding to the period elapsed between the five-year point and the market authorisation issuance date.
  • If the first market authorisation is issued more than ten years after the filing date of the corresponding patent, an SPC is granted for a five-year term.

A market authorisation in Switzerland was also considered as being a first market authorisation for the calculation of the SPC duration, even though Switzerland is not part of the European Economic Area (EEA). This is because such a market authorization was automatically effective in Liechtenstein, which is a member of the EEA (since May 1, 1995). This was decided by the European Court of Justice (ECJ) in joined cases Novartis et al. v. Comptroller-General and Ministère de l'Economie v. Millennium Pharmaceuticals. [1] [2] However, as answer to the decision of the ECJ the contract between Switzerland and Liechtenstein was amended. Since July 1st 2005 the automatic effect of a Swiss market authorization in Lichtenstein is abolished. The recognition is now delayed by a time period, which is normally 12 months.

[edit] Legal basis

Supplementary protection certificates in the European Union are based on two regulations:

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