Zürcher Nachrichten - WTO agrees to lift Covid vaccine patents, but is it 'too late'?

EUR -
AED 3.819087
AFN 72.682799
ALL 98.089398
AMD 408.896788
ANG 1.86594
AOA 954.524768
ARS 1062.897161
AUD 1.665979
AWG 1.871617
AZN 1.777387
BAM 1.948636
BBD 2.090515
BDT 123.725154
BGN 1.955014
BHD 0.392133
BIF 3061.046786
BMD 1.039787
BND 1.406131
BOB 7.154697
BRL 6.361111
BSD 1.035394
BTN 88.022406
BWP 14.310391
BYN 3.388344
BYR 20379.834362
BZD 2.081249
CAD 1.497783
CDF 2984.18977
CHF 0.932398
CLF 0.03737
CLP 1031.154673
CNY 7.589614
CNH 7.599344
COP 4564.666982
CRC 522.379595
CUC 1.039787
CUP 27.554368
CVE 109.862174
CZK 25.147272
DJF 184.372199
DKK 7.457771
DOP 63.048218
DZD 140.184369
EGP 53.110785
ERN 15.596812
ETB 129.065422
FJD 2.410903
FKP 0.823493
GBP 0.829745
GEL 2.92165
GGP 0.823493
GHS 15.220047
GIP 0.823493
GMD 74.864534
GNF 8945.1154
GTQ 7.977672
GYD 216.613671
HKD 8.078857
HNL 26.282379
HRK 7.458298
HTG 135.452043
HUF 414.927541
IDR 16823.397298
ILS 3.791088
IMP 0.823493
INR 88.514664
IQD 1356.313833
IRR 43762.057998
ISK 145.144124
JEP 0.823493
JMD 161.994466
JOD 0.73731
JPY 163.16967
KES 134.392694
KGS 90.461796
KHR 4160.704156
KMF 484.670921
KPW 935.808139
KRW 1511.1543
KWD 0.320421
KYD 0.862828
KZT 543.751028
LAK 22661.689661
LBP 92716.151012
LKR 303.98248
LRD 187.91916
LSL 19.061624
LTL 3.070222
LVL 0.628957
LYD 5.087298
MAD 10.420392
MDL 19.07089
MGA 4885.041302
MKD 61.568897
MMK 3377.189135
MNT 3533.197679
MOP 8.288728
MRU 41.176624
MUR 48.713702
MVR 15.980014
MWK 1794.887232
MXN 20.936114
MYR 4.668836
MZN 66.446297
NAD 19.061624
NGN 1607.979191
NIO 38.099935
NOK 11.79236
NPR 140.836249
NZD 1.841815
OMR 0.400316
PAB 1.035394
PEN 3.855426
PGK 4.198565
PHP 60.928948
PKR 288.191432
PLN 4.273306
PYG 8073.320348
QAR 3.774424
RON 4.977253
RSD 117.035318
RUB 104.212733
RWF 1443.294071
SAR 3.906118
SBD 8.717115
SCR 14.499106
SDG 625.434214
SEK 11.481583
SGD 1.411215
SHP 0.823493
SLE 23.710672
SLL 21803.826448
SOS 591.724664
SRD 36.528736
STD 21521.501253
SVC 9.059694
SYP 2612.497459
SZL 19.056942
THB 35.631446
TJS 11.32676
TMT 3.649654
TND 3.299171
TOP 2.435285
TRY 36.618975
TTD 7.027166
TWD 34.012527
TZS 2503.289383
UAH 43.422667
UGX 3798.037414
USD 1.039787
UYU 46.180229
UZS 13348.925833
VES 53.527677
VND 26462.591046
VUV 123.445651
WST 2.872712
XAF 653.554362
XAG 0.035083
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.810077
XDR 0.789797
XOF 653.554362
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.336802
ZAR 19.162504
ZMK 9359.342251
ZMW 28.653662
ZWL 334.81114
  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    7.27

    -0.14%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    60.5

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.86

    +0.08%

  • AZN

    0.5250

    65.875

    +0.8%

  • SCS

    -0.1400

    11.6

    -1.21%

  • GSK

    0.0800

    33.68

    +0.24%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    58.65

    +0.26%

  • RIO

    0.0300

    58.67

    +0.05%

  • CMSD

    -0.0150

    23.545

    -0.06%

  • VOD

    -0.0850

    8.305

    -1.02%

  • BCE

    -0.4700

    22.69

    -2.07%

  • BTI

    -0.2150

    36.025

    -0.6%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    45.22

    -0.55%

  • BP

    -0.1950

    28.405

    -0.69%

  • BCC

    -0.2850

    122.465

    -0.23%

  • JRI

    0.0150

    12.075

    +0.12%

WTO agrees to lift Covid vaccine patents, but is it 'too late'?
WTO agrees to lift Covid vaccine patents, but is it 'too late'? / Photo: Simon MAINA - AFP/File

WTO agrees to lift Covid vaccine patents, but is it 'too late'?

The World Trade Organization agreed Friday to temporarily lift patents on Covid-19 vaccines after two years of bruising negotiations, but experts expressed scepticism that the deal will have a major impact on global vaccination inequality.

Text size:

The unprecedented agreement, sealed by all 164 WTO members after late-night overtime talks, will grant developing countries the right to produce Covid vaccines for five years "without the consent of the right holder".

Since October 2020, South Africa and India have called for intellectual property rights for coronavirus vaccines to be temporarily lifted so they can boost production to address the gaping inequality in access between rich and poor nations.

But Friday's compromise fell short of their earlier requests that the waiver apply to all countries -- and also cover Covid tests and treatments.

Under the terms of the new deal, WTO members have six months to decide on whether to extend the measures "to cover the production and supply of Covid-19 diagnostics and therapeutics".

"This does not correspond to the initial request," said Jerome Martin, the co-founder of the Drug Policy Transparency Observatory, pointing to the fact that the deal only includes developing countries.

"We have to see what it does in the field, but it is not ambitious at all," he told AFP.

- 'Disappointing' -

James Love, director of Knowledge Ecology International, said it was "a limited and disappointing outcome".

"The fact that the exception is limited to vaccines, has a five-year duration and does not address WTO rules on trade secrets makes it particularly unlikely to provide expanded access to Covid-19 counter-measures," he said in a statement.

"The pressure this week was to reach consensus in order to make multilateralism look like it works, which seems to have been the main justification for producing this decision."

Max Lawson, co-chair of the People's Vaccine Alliance and Oxfam's head of inequality, singled out Switzerland, Britain and the European Union for "blocking anything that resembles a meaningful intellectual property waiver".

"The conduct of rich countries at the WTO has been utterly shameful," he said.

The agreement also disappointed the pharmaceutical lobby group IFPMA, which warned that "dismantling" patent protections would strangle innovation.

"The single biggest factor affecting vaccine scarcity is not intellectual property, but trade. This has not been fully addressed by the World Trade Organization," said IFPMA's director general Thomas Cueni.

And while vaccine doses were scarce early in the pandemic, that is no longer the case.

Nearly 14 billion doses had been produced worldwide as of mid-June, according to research group Airfinity.

As supply soars, some vaccine makers like the giant Serum Institute of India have stopped producing doses due to falling demand.

Yet many developing countries still lag far behind the rest of the world in vaccination rates.

While 60 percent of the world's population has received two vaccine doses, that number falls to 17 percent in Libya, eight percent in Nigeria and less than five percent in Cameroon, according to the World Health Organization.

Pharma groups have said that the logistics involved in distributing vaccines in developing countries is a far bigger hurdle to rolling out doses.

- 'Wealthy countries failed' -

Even India, which fought long and hard for the waiver, expressed doubts about whether the final compromise deal would have an effect.

Earlier this week, Indian Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said that "my own feeling is, not a single factory, not one, will ever come up with the agreement that we are finally trying to negotiate and which may get approved."

"It is just too late," he said in a statement.

It marks the first time the WTO has temporarily lifted patents on vaccines, though in 2001 it set up a compulsory licensing mechanism for HIV treatments.

Francois Pochart, a patent specialist at the August Debouzy law firm in Paris, said that the new WTO agreement is "a step forward" compared to those compulsory licences.

"Countries can decide on their own without having to make a request. The real novelty is that this waiver allows the country that produces the vaccine to also export to other markets, to another eligible member," he said.

But Christos Christou, the president of Doctors Without Borders, branded the deal "a devastating global failure".

"Despite lofty political commitments and words of solidarity, it has been discouraging for us to see that wealthy countries failed to resolve the glaring inequities in access to lifesaving Covid-19 medical tools for people in low- and middle-income countries."

R.Schmid--NZN