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WTO calls on COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers to increase production in developing countries

Christian Fernsby |
WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala on 9 March called on COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers to do more to ramp up production in developing countries to combat the vaccine supply shortage that is excluding many lower-income nations from access.

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Topics: WTO   

In remarks to an event hosted by the UK think tank Chatham House, she said cooperation on trade, and action at the WTO, would help accelerate vaccine scale-up.

The scarcity of COVID-19 vaccine supplies had led to a situation in which around 60 countries are able to move ahead with vaccination while 130 countries wait as people die, DG Okonjo-Iweala told the Global C19 Vaccine Supply Chain and Manufacturing Summit.

Not only was this morally "unconscionable," she said, it would prolong the pandemic and cause economic harm to all countries. Instead of restricting exports and bidding up prices, she argued, "it is in all of our self-interest to cooperate in dealing with this problem of the global commons."

The Director-General saw cause for hope in the first vaccine deliveries to developing countries by the COVAX facility, the global mechanism for procuring and equitably distributing COVID-19 vaccines. Nevertheless, production and delivery volumes remained too low.

"We have to scale up and scale out COVID-19 vaccine production, particularly in emerging markets and developing countries," she said. Given the years required to build new manufacturing facilities from scratch, increasing production in the short-term means "making the most of existing manufacturing capacity – finding existing sites and turning them around." Recent experience suggests that repurposing facilities and vetting them for safety and quality can happen in six or seven months, less than half as long as previously thought.

By bringing more production online around the world, she said, vaccine manufacturers would send a signal that they are taking action, and "that people and governments in low- and middle-income countries can expect to get access to affordable vaccines within a reasonable timeframe."

DG Okonjo-Iweala observed that companies in India and elsewhere were already manufacturing COVID-19 vaccines under licence but said that more such arrangements are necessary.

Discussions during the conference had highlighted three constraints to ramping up production, the Director-General noted: scarcity of raw materials, shortages of qualified and experienced personnel, and supply chain problems linked to export restrictions and prohibitions as well as excessive bureaucracy. The WTO's mandate on trade facilitation, quantitative trade restrictions, and trade policy monitoring were relevant to the latter challenges in particular.

Because vaccine production relies on sourcing components and ingredients from multiple countries, she said, trade restrictions would slow down production, and make it more expensive.

Nevertheless, DG Okonjo-Iweala noted, WTO rules do allow for export restrictions or prohibitions to be "temporarily applied to prevent or relieve critical shortages" of essential products. That said, such restrictions must be notified to all members. Restrictions should be transparent, proportionate to the problem at hand, and members should provide timelines for when they will be phased out, she said.

She reported that WTO monitoring indicates that 59 members and 7 observers still had some pandemic-related export restrictions or licensing requirements in place at the end of February, primarily for personal protective equipment. It was welcome that these figures were lower than the 91 countries that had brought in such measures over the past year. However, "not all pandemic-related export restrictions have been notified," she said. "Not all of them appear to be temporary. Not all of them are proportionate."

"We must strengthen our monitoring and reporting function," DG Okonjo-Iweala said, explaining that her objective would be to encourage members to drop or reduce export restrictions, or set timelines for phaseout, to help minimize problems in the vaccine supply chain.

With regard to trade-related bureaucracy, she invited manufacturers to tell the WTO about the problems they are encountering in real time, "so we can put them before our membership and find ways they can be minimized and if possible solved." She said a little-appreciated fact about trade policy during the pandemic is that members' trade-facilitating measures, such as electronic customs procedures and simplified paperwork requirements, have far outnumbered trade-restricting policies, and covered a higher value of merchandise.

On both export restrictions and trade facilitation, DG Okonjo-Iweala noted, prospects for action at the WTO would improve as businesses are seen to step up efforts on vaccine production.

The Director-General referred to the ongoing debate at the WTO on a proposal to waive standard WTO intellectual property rules for COVID-related vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics.

"Many of the proposal’s supporters are developing and least developed countries, deeply marked by the memory of unaffordable HIV/AIDS drugs," she told conference participants. "Many, many people died who should not have. More recently, they remember being left at the back of the queue for H1N1 vaccines as richer countries bought up available supplies, which in the end were not used." Critics of the proposed waiver, she noted, say it could threaten investment and innovation, and other members have asked for more evidence that intellectual property protections are an inhibiting factor in vaccine scale-up.

While these "vitally important discussions are intensifying here in Geneva," she said, "the fact is that each additional day the vaccine shortage continues, people will pay with their lives." She argued that it was possible to "walk and chew gum at the same time," continuing the search for solutions in the TRIPS debate, while simultaneously taking action to increase production, "especially in emerging markets and developing countries where such possibilities exist."

She expressed hope that it would be possible for manufacturers from developed and developing countries to come together with civil society groups, organizations such as the World Health Organization, Gavi, and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness (which together run the COVAX facility), and business associations including the International Chamber of Commerce to find ways to increase vaccine production.

"We must make sure that in the end we deliver so that the millions of people who are waiting for us with bated breath know that we are working on concrete solutions," she said.


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