Last year, EC customs border seized 79,112 shipments with a total retail value of €1.1 billion. The number of cases was nearly double that of last year (43,572). The shipments seized were smaller in volume, and the number of ‘articles’ seized fell from 118 million in 2009 to 103 in 2010 million.
42% of the articles detained by customs at the border were cigarettes or other tobacco products,office stationary, labels/tages/emblems, and clothing were also among the top categories of goods seized.
69% of infringing goods sent through the mail were medicines.
87.7% of the seized goods violated trademarks, 8.9% violated design and model rights, 1.5% violated copyright and related rights, and 1.5% violated geographical indications.
96% of the seizures were the result of an application by a rightholder – up from 74% two years ago. Applications from rightholders have grown rapidly in the past decade – from less than 1,000 in 2000 to over 18,000 in 2010.
The Report also contains a brief overview of various enforcement activities undertaken by the EC, including the review of Council Regulation (EC) No. 1383/2003; the development of the COPIS database to store applications from rightholders; the EU-China Joint Customs Cooperation Comittee, the ACTA negotiations, and member-state customer awareness campaigns
EU Documents
- Full Report:Report on EU Customs Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights. July 14, 2011.
- Press release. Fight against fakes: Increased customs actions boost protection of intellectual property rights. July 14, 2011.
- Detention of counterfeit and pirated goods at EU borders in 2010 – Frequently Asked Questions. July 14, 2011.