IP Australia

Australian government agency


title: "IP Australia" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["government-agencies-established-in-1998", "1998-establishments-in-australia", "government-of-australia", "patent-offices", "ig-nobel-laureates", "international-searching-and-preliminary-examining-authorities"] description: "Australian government agency" topic_path: "geography/australia" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_Australia" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Australian government agency ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox government agency"]

FieldValue
agency_nameIP Australia
logoIP Australia logo.svg
formed
jurisdictionAustralian Government
employees1,053 (FY2122)
minister1_nameTim Ayres
minister1_pfoMinister for Industry and Innovation, Minister for Science
chief1_nameMichael Schwager
chief1_positionDirector-General
chief2_namePaula Adamson
chief2_positionDeputy Director-General
chief3_nameMargaret Tregurtha
chief3_positionDeputy Director-General
parent_agencyDepartment of Industry, Science and Resources
website
::

| agency_name = IP Australia | logo = IP Australia logo.svg | formed = | jurisdiction = Australian Government | employees = 1,053 (FY2122) | minister1_name = Tim Ayres | minister1_pfo = Minister for Industry and Innovation, Minister for Science | chief1_name = Michael Schwager | chief1_position = Director-General | chief2_name = Paula Adamson | chief2_position = Deputy Director-General | chief3_name = Margaret Tregurtha | chief3_position = Deputy Director-General | parent_agency = Department of Industry, Science and Resources | website =

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/69/Discovery_House_in_Woden.jpg" caption="Discovery House, the headquarters of IP Australia in [[Canberra, Australian Capital Territory]], Australia"] ::

IP Australia is an Australian Government agency, responsible for administering intellectual property law in Australia. The agency manages the registration of patents, trade marks, registered designs and plant breeder's rights in Australia. The agency sits under the Department of Industry, Science and Resources. From 1904 until 1998, the responsible government agency was called the Australian Patent Office (APO), which is now a division within IP Australia. The headquarters are located at Discovery House in Canberra, Australia, with offices in some capital cities. IP Australia has been an International Searching Authority (ISA) and International Preliminary Examining Authority (IPEA) for patent applications filed in accordance with the Patent Co-operation Treaty since 31 March 1980. Australia is also a member of the Madrid system for trade marks, the Paris Convention for designs and the UPOV for plant breeder's rights.

Statutory basis

IP Australia exercises its authority under a number of Commonwealth laws:

  • Patents Act 1990
  • Patents Regulations 1991
  • Trade Marks Act 1995 (except Part 13 which the Australian Border Force administers)
  • Trade Marks Regulations 1995
  • Designs Act 2003
  • Designs Regulations 2004
  • Plant Breeder's Rights Act 1994
  • Plant Breeder's Rights Regulations 1994

Patent examiners

Patent examiners are generally scientists and engineers who do not necessarily hold law degrees but have received legal training in patent law. "A patent examiner is hired based on their technical expertise, their professional qualifications and possibly their industry experience. They then undergo training within the office, and we use competency based training. An examiner will take somewhere between 12 to possibly 18 months to become what is called an acceptance delegate. That means they are assessed to be competent to assess a patent application and make a decision about it qualifying or satisfying all of the legislative provisions." [June 2009].

"If you have not attained the Commissioner of Patents Acceptance Delegation within two years of the date on which you commence duties, you may have failed to meet a condition of your engagement, failed to complete your entry-level training courses and you may lack an essential qualification for the performance of your duties. Consequently, it is likely that immediate action will be taken to terminate your employment." [October 2010]

"APO is pursuing a medium-term strategy of continuing to engage patent examiners so that we can reduce that backlog during a time when our work is a little bit quieter, so that when economic activity picks up again we will be well placed. That is adding to our costs for patent examiners, in particular where we have continued to recruit." [June 2009]

To be an ISA, APO must have "at least 100 full-time employees with sufficient technical qualifications to carry out searches." [PCT Reg. 36.1 (i)]

Notable Australian patents

Operational issues

Innovation patents

In 2001, the Australian Patent Office within IP Australia introduced a system that immediately granted "innovation patents" for applications which pass a formalities test. Innovation patents are aimed at providing protection for short market life products. To demonstrate the absurdity of the system, an innovation patent application was filed for the wheel and granted automatically by IP Australia. The applicant, lawyer John Keogh, was awarded an Ig Nobel Prize (a satirical award within the fields of STEM for things that are unusual, imaginative or goofy) for his patent of the wheel.

References and notes

References

  1. "CA 8551: Intellectual Property Australia, Central Office". National Archives of Australia.
  2. (14 October 2022). "IP Australia Annual Report 2022".
  3. "Our Senior Executive".
  4. "Joint Standing Committee On Treaties, 2007-06-22, page TR43, Deputy Director General Beattie". Australian Government.
  5. "Patents Act 1990". Australian Government.
  6. "Patents Regulations 1991". Australian Government.
  7. "Trade Marks Act 1995". Australian Government.
  8. "Trade Marks Regulations 1995". Australian Government.
  9. "Designs Act 2003". Australian Government.
  10. "Designs Regulations 2004". Australian Government.
  11. "Plant Breeder's Rights Act 1994". Australian Government.
  12. "Plant Breeder's Rights Regulations 1994". Australian Government.
  13. "Senate Economics Legislation Committee Estimates, 2009-06-01, page E80, Deputy Director General Beattie". Australian Government.
  14. (August 2024). "Examiner of Patents Employment Advertisement". IP Australia.
  15. "Senate Economics Legislation Committee Estimates, 2009-06-01, page E90, Director General Noonan". Australian Government.
  16. "Regulations under the PCT, page 84". WIPO.
  17. "Refrigeration". IP Australia.
  18. "Sunshine Stripper Harvester". IP Australia.
  19. "Automatic Totalizator". IP Australia.
  20. "Furniture Castors". IP Australia.
  21. "Lawn Mower". IP Australia.
  22. "Rotary Clothes Hoist". IP Australia.
  23. "An Improved Rotary Motor". IP Australia.
  24. "A Prothesis to Simulate Neural Endings". IP Australia.
  25. "Rack and Pinion Steering Gear". IP Australia.
  26. "Yacht Keel With Fins Near Tip". IP Australia.
  27. "Pelletted Poultry Manure Fertilizer". IP Australia.
  28. "Papilloma Virus Vaccine". IP Australia.
  29. "A Wireless LAN". IP Australia.
  30. "In vivo mutations and polymorphisms in the 17q-linked breast and ovarian cancer susceptibility gene". IP Australia.
  31. "The Gene Patents Case". [[Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies]].
  32. John Michael Keogh. (2 August 2001). "Circular transportation facilitation device". IP Australia.
  33. "Register of Patents". IP Australia.
  34. Scott. (8 October 2001). "Honouring the IgNobel". [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation]].

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government-agencies-established-in-19981998-establishments-in-australiagovernment-of-australiapatent-officesig-nobel-laureatesinternational-searching-and-preliminary-examining-authorities