A new patents bill was published on Friday which will update the UK's Act of 1977. According to the Government, the revisions will improve the framework for enforcing patent rights and ensure that the law underpins and promotes innovation.

The European Patent Convention was signed in 1973, and forms the legal basis for the European Patent Organisation (EPO) and the European Patent Office. In 1977, as a member of the EPO, the UK passed the Patents Act, which implemented the Convention and is still the legislation governing patents in the UK today.

However, following a revision to the Convention in November 2000, the Department of Trade and Industry has been consulting on how best to implement these changes into UK law. The result – the Patents Act (Amendment) Bill – was published on Friday.

The main changes will:

enable the Patent Office to provide an independent non-binding opinion on patent validity or infringement to settle disputes over patent rights without parties having to resort to expensive litigation;

bring UK patent law into line with the revised European Patent Convention to reduce bureaucracy and make it simpler for UK businesses to operate across Europe;

modernise UK patent law to be more responsive to customers' needs by, for example, allowing the Patent Office to make amendments to application forms without amending regulations; and

modify existing protection for alleged infringers to encourage out-of-court settlement of disputes whilst still deterring patent owners from making unreasonable allegations of infringement.

The publication comes a few weeks after the issuing of a DTI Innovation report, which highlighted the importance of a modern and efficient patents system.

We are processing your request. \n Thank you for your patience. An error occurred. This could be due to inactivity on the page - please try again.