Spain
Reference: ES2950176
Status: Granted
First granted patent in the portfolio and an anchor asset in the current IP structure.
This page provides a structured overview of the legal protection framework surrounding the VENDOR.Energy project.
It includes both patent filings related to the technology platform and trademark protection related to brand identity and legal market distinction.
These legal instruments serve different purposes and should not be interpreted as interchangeable.
Patents protect technical subject matter. Trademarks protect names, brand identifiers, and communication consistency in business, institutional, and public-facing contexts.
This page does not describe a commercial product and should be read as part of the broader technology, validation, and legal context of the project.
The VENDOR.Energy patent portfolio is the technology protection layer of the project.
It covers patent assets that support the legal protection of the electrodynamic technology platform across multiple jurisdictions.
At the current stage, the portfolio includes granted protection, international publication, and national or regional filings under examination.
Reference: ES2950176
Status: Granted
First granted patent in the portfolio and an anchor asset in the current IP structure.
Reference: WO2024209235
Status: Published international application
International filing layer supporting broader jurisdiction strategy and national phase expansion.
Reference: EP23921569.2
Status: Under examination
Regional patent protection track within the European patent system.
Reference: CN202380015725.5
Status: Under examination
Patent filing covering a major industrial and manufacturing jurisdiction.
Reference: IN202547010911
Status: Under examination
Strategic protection track within a large growth and manufacturing market.
Reference: US national phase
Status: Under examination
Patent pathway covering the United States technology, licensing, and strategic partnership environment.
The current intellectual property structure covers multiple legal layers and jurisdictions.
Patent protection is organized through granted and pending filings across Spain, the European patent route, China, India, the United States, and the international PCT framework.
Trademark protection supports legal brand distinction and naming continuity in relevant commercial and institutional contexts.
Together, these elements form a structured IP framework rather than a single isolated legal claim.
The role of the VENDOR.Energy intellectual property structure is to protect different layers of the project in legally distinct ways.
Patents relate to technical inventions, filing priority, and jurisdiction-specific rights around the technology platform.
Trademarks relate to the protected use of the brand name and to clear legal and commercial identification of the project.
This structure supports long-term technology defensibility, legal clarity in external communications, and a more stable basis for future licensing, partnership, and institutional engagement.
It should not be interpreted as a substitute for independent validation, certification, deployment evidence, or engineering due diligence.
To protect the technology and preserve filing, validation, and partnership flexibility, this page intentionally does not disclose implementation-sensitive engineering details.
Confidential operating parameters, internal architecture configurations, trade-secret layers, and restricted technical documentation remain outside public disclosure.
For this reason, the information presented here should be interpreted as a high-level legal and structural overview of the intellectual property framework.
This page should be read together with the technical and validation materials that explain the broader context of the project.
This section clarifies how patents, trademark protection, and public disclosure are structured around the VENDOR technology project.
No. This page is a legal and structural overview of the intellectual property and brand protection framework surrounding the VENDOR project.
No. Patents protect technical subject matter and invention-related rights. Trademarks protect the brand name, identifiers, and legal market distinction.
No. Patent protection and confidential know-how can coexist. Some implementation-sensitive details may remain outside public disclosure.
No. Validation, certification, and commercial readiness are separate matters and should be evaluated through the corresponding technical and institutional materials.
Because patent procedures move on different timelines across jurisdictions, and examination is a normal part of the filing process.
Because they protect different legal layers of the same project. Presenting them together helps clarify the overall IP structure without suggesting that they perform the same function.
No. It is a high-level legal and structural overview only.