Qatar Tribune

WTO mulling intellectu­al property waivers for COVID-19 vaccines

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AMBASSADOR­S from World Trade Organizati­on countries on Wednesday resumed discussion­s on trade rules protecting the technologi­cal know-how behind COVID-19 vaccines amid growing pressure on rich nations to relax them as a way to help poorer countries fight the pandemic.

The WTO’s General Council was taking up a temporary waiver for intellectu­al property protection­s that South Africa

and India first proposed in October. The idea has gained support in the developing world and among some progressiv­e lawmakers in the West.

Authors of the proposal, which has faced resistance from many countries with inuential pharmaceut­ical and biotech industries, have been revising it in hopes of making it more palatable.

No consensus -- which is required under WTO rules -was expected to emerge from the ambassador­s’ two-day meeting on Wednesday and Thursday.

Co-sponsors of the idea were shuttling between different diplomatic missions to make their case, according to a Geneva trade official who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter. A deadlock persists, and opposing sides remain far apart, the official said.

Some proponents saw more hope for the proposal after .S. President Joe Biden’s top trade official, Katherine Tai, said last month that gaping inequities in access to COVID-19 vaccines between developed and developing countries were “completely unacceptab­le,” and that mistakes made in the global response to the HIV pandemic mustn’t be repeated.

The argument, part of a long-running debate about intellectu­al property protection­s, centers on lifting patents, copyrights, and protection­s for industrial design and confidenti­al informatio­n to help expand the production and deployment of vaccines during supply shortages. The aim is to suspend the rules for several years, just long enough to beat down the pandemic.

The issue has become more pressing with a surge in cases in India, the world’s second-most populous country and a key producer of vaccines, including one for COVID-19 that relies on technology from Oxford niversity and British-Swedish pharmaceut­ical maker Astraeneca.

Proponents, including World Health Organizati­on Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, note that such waivers are part of the WTO toolbox and insist there’s no better time to use them than during the oncein-a-century pandemic that has taken .2 million lives, infected more than 4 7 million people and devastated economies.

Opponents say a waiver would be no panacea. They insist that production of COVID-19 vaccines is complex and simply can’t be ramped up by easing intellectu­al property and say lifting protection­s could hurt future innovation.

 ??  ?? WTO Director General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
WTO Director General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

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