Guidance

Trade marks and geographical indications

Guidance for businesses and organisations on the relationship between trade marks and geographical indications (GIs) at the end of the transition period.

A geographical indication (GI) is an IP right used on products that have qualities or characteristics attributable to a specific geographical origin. Examples of UK GI products include Scotch whisky and Stilton cheese. The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) is the competent authority for GI schemes in the UK. The Intellectual Property Office works closely with Defra due to the interaction between GIs and trade marks.

GI protection in the UK after 1 January 2021

From 1 January 2021, the UK will introduce new GI schemes for agri-food products, spirit drinks, wines and aromatised wines.

For the duration of the Northern Ireland Protocol, the UK GI schemes will protect products registered as UK GIs in England, Wales and Scotland (GB) and the EU GI schemes will protect products registered as EU GIs in Northern Ireland (NI) and the EU. Defra will remain responsible for the administration and enforcement of the schemes in NI.

Defra have published guidance on the UK GI schemes and how GIs will be protected within the UK.

The guidance below explains how the UK trade marks system will interact with GI protection in the UK after 1 January 2021. Separate information on the priority between trade marks and GIs for rights filed within 9 months of the transition period can be found in the trade mark business guidance.

The relationship between trade marks and GIs

Currently, as part of the trade mark examination process, the IPO searches for GIs registered under the EU schemes and will refuse a trade mark where it conflicts with a protected GI.

When the transition period ends, the IPO’s trade mark examination will search for both:

  • GIs registered under the new UK schemes, protected in GB, and
  • GIs registered under the EU schemes, protected in NI

The relationship itself between trade marks and GIs remains unchanged, including the conditions where a trade mark may be refused where it conflicts with a GI through direct use or evocation.

Examination of trade marks where an application conflicts with an existing GI

From 1 January 2021, a trade mark application will be refused where it conflicts with a GI which is in force anywhere in the UK, including either within NI or GB.

However, applicants will have the ability to overcome such refusal if they have no intention of operating within the geographical location where the GI is in force. To do so, applicants can voluntarily limit the territorial scope of the rights conferred by their trade mark. For example, to exclude trade mark coverage in NI or GB.

This uses the existing provision at section 13(1)(b) of the Trade Marks Act 1994. It means the applicant will not be able to enforce the trade mark or market products bearing the mark in the geographical area excluded, but can benefit from the registration of their trade mark in the rest of the UK. All applicants will be guided through this option by the trade mark examiner handling their application.

Further information will be available in the trade mark examination guide after the end of the transition period, to reflect the new practice.

Where a trade mark conflicts with a GI which is in force across the whole of the UK (registered in NI through the EU scheme and in GB through the UK scheme) a territorial limitation will not overcome this objection.

Limiting a trade mark specification to overcome an objection

The existing practice will remain where a legitimate GI producer can amend their trade mark specification to ensure compliance with the protected GI. A trade mark objection where the GI is in force may be overcome if the trade mark specifications are limited to comply with the specifications of the GI. For example, the mark ‘Rees Cornish Pasties’ filed in respect of ‘pastry products’ would be acceptable if the specification is limited to ‘pasties which comply with the regulations of the Protected Geographical Indication Cornish Pasty’.

Published 17 December 2020