Brabant strengthens its position as an innovation stronghold
The number of patents is seen as an essential indicator of a country’s innovative strength. Brabant’s dominance is exceptional: the number two, South Holland, applied for nearly three times fewer patents than Brabant. “The new figures are once again proof of the strong innovation culture in this region,” said Guido Leestemaker, Foreign Investments project manager at the Brabantse Ontwikkelings Maatschappij (BOM). “Despite the challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic, labor market tightness, and geopolitical turmoil in Europe, our region remains undiminished innovative. The innovative climate is still strong, and growth remains robust.”
For large companies, patents are important to ensure their distinctive value. For example, Philips has accumulated tens of thousands of patent rights. This year’s harvest totaled 1338 patents, and Philips’ former lighting branch Signify, headquartered at the High Tech Campus, came in second at 743 patents. The main themes in Dutch patent applications are medical technology, electrical machinery, and organic chemicals.
Attracting businesses
Leestemaker emphasizes that the patents (and thus the innovativeness) do not all originate from Dutch companies. “Our efforts to attract valuable innovative foreign companies to Brabant also contribute to this development. More than 25 percent of Dutch patents come from foreign companies, and in Brabant, these include STMicroelectronics in Eindhoven and Sabic in Bergen op Zoom.”
- STMicroelectronics is a global developer and supplier of semiconductors and other electronic solutions. The company offers a wide range of products, including microcontrollers, sensors, power management circuits, and analog ICs used in various industries, including automotive, industrial automation, consumer electronics, and telecommunications.
- Sabic in Bergen op Zoom is engaged, among other things, in producing and developing innovative plastics. The company specializes in developing high-performance plastics that are used, for example, in the automotive industry, building and construction, packaging, healthcare, and electronics.
The majority in the top 10 are from outside Europe
The EPO received 193,460 applications worldwide last year, 2.5 percent more than the year before. The Netherlands ranks third out of all European countries. More than 6,800 applications came from the Netherlands; in 2021, the figure was 6,578. Patent applications from the Netherlands were mainly for inventions of medical technology, electrical machines, and organic chemicals.
Huawei was the leading patent applicant at the EPO for the fourth time since 2017, followed by LG, Qualcomm, Samsung, and Ericsson. The top ten includes four companies from Europe (Philips, BASF, Ericsson, and Siemens), two from South Korea, two from the US, and one each from China and Japan. Patent applications also often come from small companies, according to the EPO. One in five requests worldwide in 2022 came from an individual inventor or a small or medium-sized organization with fewer than 250 employees. Universities and public research organizations applied for seven percent of patents.
Source: Innovation Origins