COVID-19 vaccines

UN chief pushes voluntary sharing of COVID-19 vaccine licenses

Reuters

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UN chief pushes voluntary sharing of COVID-19 vaccine licenses

PPE. Members of Nepal army personnel wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) rest on a vehicle as they wait to transport a body of a person who died from coronavirus disease (COVID-19) to the crematorium, while Nepal is overwhelmed by a COVID-19 surge as India's outbreak spreads across South Asia, in Kathmandu, Nepal May 5, 2021.

Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters

Some UN officials say the waiver discussion is a distraction and an ideological fight that won't solve the problem of how to scale up vaccine manufacturing

UN chief Antonio Guterres believes vaccine makers should allow other companies to produce versions of their COVID-19 shots, a UN spokesman said on Wednesday, May 5, as the World Trade Organization discussed waiving patent rights to boost supply to developing countries.

“The Secretary-General has often called for technology transfers and sharing of know-how and voluntary licensing or sharing of licensing,” spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.

WTO members are assessing signs of progress after seven months of talks on a proposal by South Africa and India to waive patent rights on COVID-19 vaccines. WTO decisions are based on consensus, so all 164 members must agree.

Some UN officials say the waiver discussion is a distraction and an ideological fight that won’t solve the problem of how to scale up vaccine manufacturing.

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The 60 sponsors of the proposal from emerging economies are pitted against richer developed countries – such as Switzerland, the United States, and in the European Union – where many pharmaceutical companies are based.

Guterres has long called for COVID-19 vaccines to be made available to all countries and appealed for more money to fund the COVAX vaccine sharing facility, which aims to buy up to 1.8 billion doses in 2021 to ensure equitable global access.

COVAX is run by the Gavi Vaccine Alliance, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), the World Health Organization (WHO) and the UN children’s agency UNICEF.

Last month UNICEF called for vaccine Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) to be simplified through “voluntary and proactive licensing” but warned this alone wouldn’t increase production.

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“IPR holders would need to provide technology partnerships to accompany IP licenses, proactively share know-how, and sub-contract to manufacturers without undue geographic or volume restrictions,” UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore said.

“This challenge requires not forced IP waivers but proactive partnership and cooperation,” she said.

She cited recent manufacturing partnerships as “encouraging examples” and urged others to follow suit, to increase the scale and geographic diversity of manufacturing capacity. – Rappler.com

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