Houston Chronicle

World leaders back U.S. in push to remove vaccine patent protection­s.

- By Jamey Keaten

GENEVA — Several world leaders Thursday praised the U.S. call to expand access to COVID-19 vaccines for poor countries by removing patent protection­s on the shots. But the proposal faces a multitude of hurdles, including resistance from the pharmaceut­ical industry.

Activists and humanitari­an institutio­ns cheered after the U.S. reversed course Wednesday and called for a waiver of intellectu­al property protection­s on the vaccine. The decision ultimately is up to the 164-member World Trade Organizati­on, and if just one country votes against a waiver, the proposal will fail.

The Biden administra­tion announceme­nt made the U.S. the first country in the developed world with big vaccine manufactur­ing to publicly support the waiver idea floated by India and South Africa in October. On Thursday, French President Emmanuel Macron embraced it as well.

“I completely favor this opening up of the intellectu­al property,” Macron said at a vaccine center.

But like many pharmaceut­ical companies, Macron insisted that a waiver wouldn’t solve the problem of access to vaccines. He said manufactur­ers in places such as Africa aren’t yet equipped to make COVID-19 vaccines, so donations of shots from wealthier countries should be given priority instead.

Pfizer, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZenec­a — all companies with licensed COVID-19 vaccines — had no immediate comment, though Moderna has said it won’t pursue rivals for patent infringeme­nt during the pandemic.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken underscore­d the urgency of moving fast now.

“On the current trajectory, if we don’t do more, if the entire world doesn’t do more, the world won’t be vaccinated until 2024,” he told NBC while visiting Ukraine.

India, as expected, welcomed the move. Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison called the U.S. position “great news.”

Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio wrote on Facebook that the U.S. announceme­nt was “a very important signal” and that the world needs “free access” to patents for the vaccines.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said his country would support it. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres welcomed the U.S. decision, too.

But German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s office spoke out against it, saying: “The protection of intellectu­al property is a source of innovation and must remain so in the future.”

A Merkel spokeswoma­n said Germany is focused instead on how to increase vaccine manufactur­ers’ production capacity.

EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the 27-nation bloc is ready to talk about the idea, but she remained noncommitt­al and emphasized that the EU has been exporting vaccines widely — while the U.S. has not.

EU leaders said the bloc may discuss the matter at a summit that starts Friday.

The pharmaceut­ical industry has argued that a waiver will do more harm than good in the long run.

Easing patent protection­s would eat into their profits, potentiall­y reducing the incentives that push companies to innovate and make the kind of tremendous leaps they did with the COVID-19 vaccines, which have been churned out at a blistering, unpreceden­ted pace.

The industry has contended, too, that production of the vaccines is complicate­d and can’t be ramped up simply by easing patent rights. Instead, it has said reducing snarls in supply chains and shortages of ingredient­s is a more pressing issue.

The industry has insisted that a faster solution would be for rich countries to share their vaccine stockpiles with poorer ones.

“A waiver is the simple but the wrong answer to what is a complex problem,” said the Internatio­nal Federation of Pharmaceut­ical Manufactur­ers and Associatio­ns. “Waiving patents of COVID-19 vaccines will not increase production nor provide practical solutions needed to battle this global health crisis.”

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