Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

• U.S. supports waiving intellectu­al rights on vaccines,

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WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion on Wednesday joined calls for more sharing of the technology behind COVID-19 vaccines to help speed the end of the pandemic, a shift that puts the U.S. alongside many in the developing world who want rich countries to do more to get doses to the needy.

U.S. Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai announced the government’s position, amid World Trade Organizati­on talks about a possible temporary waiver of its protection­s that would allow more manufactur­ers to produce the lifesaving vaccines.

“The administra­tion believes strongly in intellectu­al property protection­s but in service of ending this pandemic supports the waiver of those protection­s for COVID-19 vaccines,” Ms. Tai said in a statement.

She cautioned that it would take time to reach the required global “consensus” to waive the protection­s under WTO rules, and U.S. officials said it would not have an immediate effect on the global supply of COVID-19 shots.

“This is a global health crisis, and the extraordin­ary circumstan­ces of the COVID-19 pandemic call for extraordin­ary measures,” said Ms. Tai. “The administra­tion’s aim is to get as many safe and effective vaccines to as many people as fast as possible.”

Ms. Tai’s announceme­nt came hours after WTO Director- General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala spoke to a closed-door meeting of ambassador­s from developing and developed countries that have been wrangling over the issue but agree on the need for wider access to COVID-19 treatments.

The WTO’s General Council took up the issue of a temporary waiver for intellectu­al property protection­s on COVID-19 vaccines and other tools, which South Africa and India first proposed in October. The idea has gained support among some progressiv­e lawmakers in the West.

More than 100 countries have come out in support of the proposal, and a group of 110 members of Congress — all fellow Democrats of President Joe Biden — sent him a letter last month that called on him to support the waiver.

Opponents — especially from industry — say a waiver would be no panacea. They insist that production of coronaviru­s vaccines is complex and can’t be ramped up by easing intellectu­al property. They also say lifting protection­s could hurt future innovation.

“In the midst of a deadly pandemic, the Biden administra­tion has taken an unpreceden­ted step that will undermine our global response to the pandemic and compromise safety,” said Stephen Ubl, president and CEO of the Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America.

“This decision will sow confusion between public and private partners, further weaken already strained supply chains and foster the proliferat­ion of counterfei­t vaccines,” he said.

Dr. Michelle McMurry -Heath, chief executive of the Biotechnol­ogy Innovation Organizati­on trade group, said in a statement that the Biden administra­tion’s decision will undermine incentives to develop vaccines and treatments for future pandemics.

“Handing needy countries a recipe book without the ingredient­s, safeguards and sizable workforce needed will not help people waiting for the vaccine,” she said. “Handing them the blueprint to construct a kitchen that — in optimal conditions — can take a year to build will not help us stop the emergence of dangerous new COVID variants.”

It remained unclear how some countries in Europe, which have influentia­l pharmaceut­ical industries and had previously shared U.S. reservatio­ns about the waiver, would respond.

WTO spokesman Keith Rockwell said a panel on intellectu­al property at the trade body was expected to take up the waiver proposal again at a “tentative” meeting later this month, before a formal meeting June 8-9. That means any final deal could be weeks away at best.

He pointed to a change in tone in WTO talks Wednesday, after months of wrangling.

“I would say that the discussion was far more constructi­ve, pragmatic. It was less emotive and less finger pointing than it had been in the past,” Mr. Rockwell said, citing a surge in cases in places like India.

Authors of the proposal have been revising it in hopes of making it more palatable.

Ms. Okonjo-Iweala, in remarks posted on the WTO website, said it was “incumbent on us to move quickly to put the revised text on the table, but also to begin and undertake text-based negotiatio­ns.”

“I am firmly convinced that once we can sit down with an actual text in front of us, we shall find a pragmatic way forward” that is “acceptable to all sides,” she said.

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.

 ?? Sarah Silbiger/Associated Press ?? U.S. Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai announced Wednesday that the Biden adminstrat­ion supports efforts to wave intellectu­al property protection­s for the COVID-19 vaccines amid World Trade Organizati­on talks over easing global trade rules to enable more countries to produce more of the life-saving vaccines.
Sarah Silbiger/Associated Press U.S. Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai announced Wednesday that the Biden adminstrat­ion supports efforts to wave intellectu­al property protection­s for the COVID-19 vaccines amid World Trade Organizati­on talks over easing global trade rules to enable more countries to produce more of the life-saving vaccines.

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