EU
and U.S. to reduce vaccine export barriers, summit draft says
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[June 09, 2021]
By Robin Emmott and Francesco Guarascio
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union and
the United States are set to agree at a summit on Tuesday to reduce
export restrictions on COVID-19 vaccines and drugs, a draft joint text
says, arguing that voluntary sharing of technology is the key to
boosting output.
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The document, seen by Reuters and still subject to changes, makes no
mention of mandatory waivers on vaccine patents, which U.S.
President Joe Biden has endorsed as a temporary solution to the
global shortage of COVID-19 shots.
The EU has repeatedly opposed the idea, which is backed by dozens of
poorer nations.
Brussels submitted a less radical counter-proposal to the World
Trade Organization last week that highlights existing WTO rules
allowing countries to grant licences to manufacturers without the
consent of the patent-holder..
At a EU-U.S. summit in Brussels on Tuesday, the two parties are set
to agree to establish a joint taskforce to boost vaccine and drugs
production capacity that will aim at "maintaining open and secure
supply chains, avoiding any unnecessary export restrictions".
The EU has urged Washington not to hamper the export of vaccines and
materials needed for their production. Biden is using the
decades-old U.S. Defense Production Act (DPA) to put the U.S.
government first in line to buy American-made vaccines and
treatments, and control the supplies they require.
The draft also says the taskforce will try to expand global
production of vaccines and drugs by "encouraging voluntary sharing
of knowhow and technology on mutually-determined terms" - a far
remove from forcing pharmaceutical companies to give away their
patents to competitors.
A taskforce led by EU Industry Commissioner Thierry Breton is
already meeting regularly with a U.S. COVID-19 taskforce chaired by
Jeffrey Zients to address production and trade bottlenecks affecting
vaccine makers.
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CureVac, a German biotech firm
that is developing a vaccine, has already been
helped to access materials from the United
States as a result of two-way political
dialogue. The joint taskforce is
intended to strengthen and formalise the work done so far, an EU
official said.
The draft conclusions of the EU-U.S. summit also reaffirm support
for the World Health Organization's (WHO) COVAX programme, intended
to ensure fair distribution of vaccines around the world.
Brussels and Washington pledge in the draft to "encourage more
donors to make 2 billion vaccine doses available worldwide by late
2021".
The United States has so far pledged to donate 80 million of its
excess doses to poorer nations, and the EU at least 100 million by
the end of the year.
But the task of fully inoculating the world is expected to be a long
one. The text says that the U.S. and the EU "aspire to vaccinate at
least two-thirds of the world's population by the end of 2022".
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio @fraguarascio and Robin Emmott;
Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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