Even
after U.S. shift, opponents resist COVID-19 vaccine patent waiver
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[June 01, 2021]
By Emma Farge
GENEVA (Reuters) - A deal on an
intellectual property waiver for COVID-19 vaccines at the World Trade
Organization (WTO) was no closer to acceptance on Monday despite
Washington's backing, due to expected scepticism about a new draft,
sources close to the talks told Reuters.
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Negotiations reopened at the WTO on Monday, focused on a highly
anticipated revised draft submitted by India, South Africa and
dozens of other developing countries last week.
A surprise U.S. shift earlier this month to support a patent waiver
heaped pressure on remaining opponents like the European Union and
Switzerland that are home to numerous drugmakers. But Monday's
discussions - the 11th session since the initial waiver proposal in
October - failed to achieve a breakthrough.
The waiver's main backers presented their new draft in Monday's
private WTO meeting, allowing key players to give their first
official feedback on its contents.

The meeting is critical because it will determine if the talks will
advance to "text-based negotiations" as sought by director-general
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.
A Geneva trade official said the proposal to start text-based
discussions "gained traction" on Monday, including from the United
States, which said it was open to discussion on any proposal that
could boost vaccine production and delivery.
It did not openly support the revised text, but said it was
analysing it.
Around 10 countries, including South Korea and Britain, continued to
express doubts and asked for more time to study the new South
Africa/India proposal.
Three sources close to the talks see problems with the text.
"There is an ocean between this waiver proposal and what was
suggested by the U.S.," said a source involved in the talks who
declined to be named. "There's definitely no quick resolution for
this."
Two aspects of the waiver draft that may harden opposition are its
scope and duration.
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 While U.S. Trade Representative
Katherine Tai had previously said she is only
focused on increasing vaccine access, the new
draft also includes diagnostics, therapeutics
and medical devices, among others.
"When you have a big bomb like the U.S. saying we will support the
waiver, people were expecting the revised proposal would narrow the
scope," said a Geneva-based trade source.
The draft also sets a time span for a waiver seen as temporary of
"at least three years" and allows the WTO's 164 members to determine
when it ends. Given they would need to do this by consensus, one
country could repeatedly prolong it.
"If the proponents insist on it (the duration), there will almost
certainly be no consensus agreement on the waiver," said Peter
Ungphakorn, a former WTO staff member who now writes blogs on trade.
An EU diplomat told Reuters that the revised text would"likely call
the U.S. bluff". The European Union is set to present an alternative
plan for boosting production and availability of COVID-19 vaccines
to the WTO in early June.

(Additional reporting by Philip Blenkinsop in Brussels and David
Lawder in Washington, Editing by John Miller, Bernadette Baum and
Bill Berkrot)
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