This October, the Eastern European state of Georgia became the fifth state to sign a validation agreement with the European Patent Office, thus allowing European patents and patent applications to take legal effect there.
Here, we examine the t’s and c’s behind the validation agreement, how patent protection in Georgia could benefit businesses looking to build a footprint in Eastern Europe, and whether other states are likely to follow suit.
On 31 October, António Campinos, president of the European Patent Office (EPO), and Genadi Arveladze, Georgia’s Deputy Minister of Economy and Sustainable Development, met in Munich to sign a validation agreement that, once in force, will allow European patent applications and patents to take legal effect in the Eastern European state.
Marking the latest milestone in the European Union’s efforts to build political association and economic integration with Georgia, the agreement also signifies an expansion in the protection a European patent will afford.