Only one factory in India is allowed to produce the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine. Credit: Himanshu Vyas/Hindustan Times via Getty Images

A gargantuan yet widely unreported struggle is taking place in Geneva that could affect how quickly billions of people are vaccinated against Covid-19. It’s a struggle that will also affect how soon effective treatments will be available. Depending on how it is resolved, it could change the landscape of medical innovation permanently — and take decisions about which diseases are prioritised out of the hands of the pharmaceutical industry.
Last October, two members of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), India and South Africa, proposed a waiver that would allow countries to choose not to enforce certain intellectual property (IP) rights relating to tests, treatments, equipment and vaccines for Covid-19. If approved, this would mean that for the duration of the pandemic, a country could locally manufacture a vaccine, ventilator or Covid-19 test while they were still under patent elsewhere, boosting supplies and getting these technologies to those who need them faster. At the moment, with rare exceptions, manufacturers must be licensed by the patent-holder for the duration of the patent, which is typically 20 years.
The lobbying has been intense over the last few months, but those countries that have already declared their positions on the waiver have done so along predictable lines. The poorer states of the Global South, which tend to be at the back of the queue for vaccines and everything else, have aligned themselves with India and South Africa; the wealthy Global North, where the companies holding the patents also tend to be headquartered, is broadly opposed. As Mira Johri, professor of global health at the University of Montreal, puts it: “The map of vaccine roll-outs looks a lot like the map of who is opposed to the WTO waiver.”
The pandemic has highlighted the fact that demand and supply don’t necessarily go together, in turn raising the question of whether our system for producing new medicines — driven as it is by commercial incentives — is fit for purpose. Indeed, its fragility was highlighted only last night, when it was revealed that the EU is threatening to block exports of the Belgian-produced Pfizer jab – of which the UK is expecting almost 3.5 million doses.
More broadly, it’s a simple fact that rich countries are serving themselves first – but in practising such “vaccine nationalism” they are doing the world a disservice. Leaving poorer countries without vaccine protection could trigger a number of undesirable consequences for every nation — from disrupting global supply chains, including of the vaccine itself, to potentially driving the emergence of new variants of the virus. As the WHO’s director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said earlier this month: “Vaccine nationalism hurts us all and is self-defeating.”
Since the pandemic first hit, it has become clear that well-meaning initiatives like COVAX — which brings together governments, global health organisations and the private sector to try to ensure equitable global access to Covid-19 vaccines — are not enough to counter vaccine nationalism. (Though last week’s announcement that the US will join COVAX, having stayed out under the Trump administration, could help.) Of the 7 billion vaccine doses whose advance purchase has been confirmed, more than half (4.2 billion), have gone to high-income countries, whose combined population is around 1 billion, out of a global total of nearly 8 billion. Only around 1.5 billion doses have gone to middle-income countries (combined population around 6 billion) and just 270 million doses have gone to low-income countries. COVAX, meanwhile, has secured around 1 billion doses.
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