I have some experience with this.
A lot of nations with commercial trading relationships with the US have agreed to honor US patents and also copyrights. the EU is pretty good about honoring US intellectual property.
However, a lot of other nations do not get too excited about enforcement, so ripoff stuff is common, hence "pirate" videos in certain really large Asian countries, etc. In fact, counterfeit auto parts are not at all unusual.
Most people that are serious about patenting some invention do it in the US and also in Europe, for good measure.
Getting a patent is really easy. Your ability to enforce the patent is really difficult. If someone rips off your idea and mass produces it, you have to track them down, sue them, and then collect the money they owe you. If the someone is, for example, GM or Toyota, you have to be able to have enough resources behind you to fight against a big team of lawyers, in some far off place, and make it stick. This will cost you loads of money, time, effort, and you still have to convince a jury that they did not change it just enough so that they are not infringing on your idea.
The classic example of this is the guy that invented the "ratcheting" socket wrench, and who Sears summarily ripped off. Eventually, in 1989, he finally was awarded some money.
NY Times
This being the case, people use patents all the time to misdirect their competitors, enhance their position in the marketplace, or do some other mischeif. You can patent anything you want, and do not even have to have a working prototype, so it is not at all uncommon for people to load patents up with spurious claims, or inventions that are just plain non-functional, or so vague that it is questionably enforceable. But it enhances the value of your business if you own a few patents, so this is a pretty common practice for someone who might want to sell a business, for example.
This is probably the case with the character in this case. After reading the abstract, frankly, there is some question in my mind as to whether or not he knows exactly what the hell he is talking about. I am not a physicist, but I do not understand it. Most "real" patents do not have a lot of double talk.
The best way to commercialize some gadget that improves some aspect of product performance is to find some small, aggressive competitor to the monolithic company. The ideal candidate would be big enough to bring the product to market, but small enough so that if you had to sue them you could. You negotiate some licensing/royalty fee, turn the idea over to them for refinement and production. You are happy, they are happy, and you can go up against the giant companies with a little more weight on your side.