WTO chief says global action needed after vaccine talks

The head of the World Trade Organization set out a series of actions for countries, vaccine makers and international bodies to increase production of vaccines and make them more widely available, according to Reuters,

WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala called a meeting of producers, governments and finance institutions and laid out challenges for each, including action to reduce export restrictions and progress in talks on a proposal to waive temporarily pharmaceutical companies’ intellectual property rights.

Earlier Okonjo-Iweala said the meeting was to be attended by major manufacturers and look at solutions such as firing up idle or under-used manufacturing plants in Africa and Asia.

Okonjo-Iweala, a former Nigerian minister and World Bank executive who took up the position last month, has vowed to “forget business as usual” at the 25-year-old global trade watchdog and said her top priority was to address the COVID-19 pandemic, Reuters reported.

The meeting planned to bring together vaccine makers from the US, China and Russia, ministers from wealthy and developing countries, and banking officials to discuss vaccine export restrictions, scaling up manufacturing and a waiver of intellectual property rights for COVID-19 drugs and shots, she told Reuters.

“The vaccine inequity is glaring,” Okonjo-Iweala said.

“I’m a pragmatic person and what hurts me now is that people are dying from not having access to vaccines.”

“We have the technology in the world to save lives so I want to get onto it and find some solutions that will make a difference.”

Among the possible practical solutions are re-purposing animal vaccine plants to make COVID shots or firing up unused capacity in countries like Bangladesh, Thailand and Senegal by connecting them with financiers like the European Investment Bank or the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation.

The meeting, the first of a series, aimed to raise the controversial waiver of TRIPS intellectual property rights for COVID-19 drugs on which members are deadlocked, amid opposition from wealthy countries.

However, Okonjo-Iweala was upbeat: “I am hearing more pragmatism from all sides and that is leading me to think that members will come to the table and agree on something that will work for all sides.”

She praised countries that were exporting some of their COVID-19 vaccines but also said she had brought up vaccine export curbs in talks with Thierry Breton who heads the EU executive’s vaccine task force and trade chief Valdis Dombrovskis, and with Indian officials.

“I am urging: let us try not to impede the supply chain,” she said, adding she thought her message was “being heard.”