Minutes - TRIPS Council - View details of the intervention/statement

H.E. Ambassador Dagfinn Sørli (Norway)
Chad on behalf of LDC Group
13; 14 PROPOSAL FOR A WAIVER FROM CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF THE TRIPS AGREEMENT FOR THE PREVENTION, CONTAINMENT AND TREATMENT OF COVID-19; DRAFT GENERAL COUNCIL DECLARATION ON THE TRIPS AGREEMENT AND PUBLIC HEALTH IN THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF A PANDEMIC

426.   On behalf of the LDC Group, I would like to say the following: 427.   Firstly, we align ourselves with the statements made by South Africa and India. Many delegations have raised this issue. The postponement of MC12 shows how urgent it is to make progress on this fundamental issue and to find a collective solution that is realistic or pragmatic. In any case, there is an urgent need for the Council to move in the direction of a collective solution. I fully share the position of our colleague from Vanuatu. The starting point for the negotiations must be a text. Lives must be saved and steps taken to ensure that the COVID-19 pandemic does not exacerbate the current situation by creating a large number of victims. This will force States to reintroduce restrictions on the movement of people and goods. We are well aware of the consequences: a slowdown in global activity, slowing global demand, and economic disruption, which lead to unrest and uncertainty for economies and world trade. I would also say that, in the light of the current situation, they even cause violence in some countries. 428.   A few months ago, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization, warned that the world is on the brink of a catastrophic moral failure and the price of this failure will be paid with lives and livelihoods, particularly in the poorest countries, which are our countries. The trends we are seeing are deeply troubling. And we have often reiterated that vaccine nationalism will, in any case, not work, as COVID-19 has returned with a new variant. New variants will also emerge in the weeks and months to come. The situation is therefore extremely worrying and alarming. Therefore, at the level of the LDC Group, we believe that we must ensure that everyone will be able to have affordable access to the vaccines, medicines and other new technology needed to control the pandemic. This is a requirement for the safety of all and it is the equally vital challenge facing us today with the new variant. Multilateralism is the only way we can deliver an effective response to the global challenge. Our common interest depends heavily on that. The delegations' proposal is an opportunity to take practical steps to help prevent another tragic recurrence with regard to access to vital treatment or, at any rate, access to vaccines. The discussion that has taken place within the TRIPS Council must allow all Members to ensure that the barriers to access to these types of products and to their trade are minimized in order to foster the resilience of our economies and our peoples in the face of this pandemic, but also to build a fairer, more equitable and more inclusive system that truly responds to global public health needs. 429.   Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic many developing countries and LDCs have become more vulnerable and are finding it difficult to obtain basic medical supplies. The great disparity between countries raises serious concerns about the availability and accessibility of the medical products needed to treat COVID-19. It is important to take all the necessary steps to allow everyone to be able to have access to vaccines. 430.   Lastly, in light of the significant health challenges to be met, as we currently see the worrying and urgent situation, the Group calls on all WTO Members to reach a quick decision in the TRIPS Council and the General Council so that we can really resolve this issue, which affects, quite simply, all humankind.

78. The Chair said that the "Proposal for A Waiver from Certain Provisions of The TRIPS Agreement for the Prevention, Containment and Treatment of COVID-19" had been circulated in document at the request of India and South Africa on 2 October 2020. It had since been co- sponsored by the delegations of the Plurinational State of Bolivia; Kenya; Eswatini; Mozambique; Pakistan; the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela; Mongolia; Zimbabwe; Egypt; the African Group; the LDC Group; the Maldives; Fiji; Namibia; Vanuatu; Indonesia and Jordan. A revised proposal had been circulated by the co-sponsors on 21 May 2021 in document , which had since been co-sponsored by the delegation of Malaysia.
79. He recalled that, since the formal meeting of the TRIPS Council on 8-9 June 2021, there had been an intensive schedule of dedicated meetings to discuss this and related proposals in various formats. This involved a series of small-group consultations with delegations and group coordinators, five informal open-ended meetings for the purposes of transparency and inclusiveness, and two additional formal meetings of the Council to adopt successive status reports to the General Council. In its most recent oral status report to the General Council on 4 October, Members had concluded that: "[…] the TRIPS Council has not yet completed its consideration of the revised waiver request. The TRIPS Council will therefore continue its consideration of the revised waiver request, including through small-group consultations and informal open-ended meetings, and report back to the General Council as stipulated in Article IX:3 of the Marrakesh Agreement. In addition, the TRIPS Council will also continue in the same manner its consideration of the other related proposals by Members".
80. At the informal open-ended meeting of the Council on 14 September 2021, delegations had expressed their willingness to continue discussing specific aspects of the proposals in small-group meetings. He had therefore suggested to hold one small-group meeting in each of the next two weeks, and then reunite for an informal open-ended meeting of the TRIPS Council for the sake of openness, transparency, and inclusiveness, and to provide an opportunity to take stock and discuss how to advance further in light of that experience.
81. The Chair informed the Council that the two small-group consultations were held on 23 and 29 September. At the first meeting, which was dedicated to discussing 'scope' and 'implementation', delegations had engaged constructively in the questions underlying the waiver proposal and discussed the practical differences between TRIPS flexibilities and the waiver approach at the national level. On that occasion he had also heard delegations expressing their willingness to explore areas of common interest. One particular aspect of the discussion had touched on the existing TRIPS flexibilities and the concern voiced by the co-sponsors of the revised waiver proposal, that the use of such flexibilities was cumbersome. Thus, the second small-group consultation had aimed to examine one of the TRIPS flexibilities cited in the discussions, namely the requirements for using compulsory licensing in Articles 31, 31bis and the Annex of the TRIPS Agreement; and to relate any assessment of the practical impact of these requirements to the two proposals before the Council. Delegations had detailed exchanges on individual sub-paragraphs of Article 31 and 31bis of the TRIPS Agreement, and their impact on the practical use of compulsory licensing. In general, deliberations had taken place in a constructive atmosphere and it seemed that some of these detailed discussions could be pursued further. Some delegations had also voiced their frustration with the lack of progress, while a number of delegations had urged Members to focus on practical areas where consensus could be feasible in the short term.
82. At the informal open-ended meeting of 4 October 2021, the co-sponsors of the revised waiver proposal had once again indicated their flexibility towards considering the proposal by the European Union as a complementary approach, but they had emphasized that, in their view, a TRIPS waiver was a central and necessary element in the WTO's response to the pandemic. They had urged Members to end the binary view of the two proposals as alternatives.
83. Other Members, while welcoming the increased engagement in the small-group consultations, had remained unconvinced that a waiver would be an appropriate or effective tool to scale up production or ensure equitable distribution of vaccine doses around the world. These delegations had highlighted the broader Trade and Health initiative as the right tool to address the supply chain bottlenecks that the pandemic response was facing. Some had urged convergence on the basis of the proposal by the European Union aimed at clarifying, or improving the functioning of, existing TRIPS flexibilities.
84. While it had been clear that discussions had not bridged the persisting disagreement on the fundamental approaches underlying the different proposals, he noted that all delegations remained willing to continue discussion on the proposals in the various meeting formats.
85. The Chair stressed the importance of bilateral engagement between delegations in order to explore common ground and find possible landing zones, which Members could agree upon to conclude these discussions in the TRIPS Council. He said the world was expecting the Council to find a resolution of these discussions soon, and this could only happen if delegations could find agreement amongst themselves. He encouraged delegations to intensify their bilateral contacts and indicated his availability to facilitate engagement in a smaller group, keeping in mind that any outcomes from engagement between individual Members regarding the conclusion of the discussions should feed back into the Council and through it into the broader MC12 discussions. He sincerely hoped that engagement between delegations could still lead to something the Council could agree on, be that in the shape of a recommendation of the TRIPS Council as foreseen under Article IX:3 of the Marrakesh Agreement, or be it through some other consensus decision representing a conclusion of this process.
86. The representatives of the United Kingdom; South Africa; Pakistan; Bangladesh; the Plurinational State of Bolivia; Chile; Cuba; Nigeria, the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela; Egypt; Indonesia; the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia; India; the European Union; Korea; Singapore; Türkiye; Japan; China; Switzerland; Norway; New Zealand; the United States; Namibia; Colombia; Australia; Brazil; and Mozambique took the floor.
87. The Chair said that, with respect to the suggestion to move the current TRIPS discussion into the process on trade and health issues Ambassador Walker was facilitating under the aegis of the Chair of the General Council at this time, it seemed clear to him that any conclusions on how different WTO disciplines should respond to the pandemic would all have to be part of the MC12 outcome document, and that IP was clearly expected to be part of that, in some form or other. Considering the attention and bandwidth that the Council's discussion had occupied over the last year, he was not concerned that the waiver request would somehow be forgotten in any prospective MC12 ministerial declaration.
88. In terms of procedure, he said it was for Members to decide whether they would want to terminate the waiver discussions in the TRIPS Council at that time to continue them in Ambassador Walker's process together with the equally complex trade-related considerations discussed there, or whether they would prefer to continue focused efforts to find a consensus conclusion on the IP-related discussions in the TRIPS context, which could then be introduced into an overall MC12 outcome document, together with any outcome resulting from Ambassador Walker's process.
89. While procedural considerations should not stand in the way if consensus among Members emerges, the Chair recalled that it was the TRIPS Council's obligation to come up with a recommendation, so that the procedure foreseen under the waiver provisions of the Marrakech Agreement could be properly concluded.
90. In light of the discussion, it seemed that the Council was not yet ready to agree on a recommendation, but that there remained a willingness to continue discussions and exploring possible common ground. The Chair proposed to keep the agenda item open, and thus permit delegations to further explore common ground and possible compromise solutions to this discussion. If there emerged an indication that Members were in a position to reach consensus, he would reconvene the Council to see whether an agreement could be reached on how to conclude these discussions before the Ministerial Conference, in a timely manner.
91. The Council took note of the statements made and agreed to keep the agenda item open.
92. During the reconvened meeting on 18 November, the Chair recalled that, as discussed at an informal open-ended meeting on 15 November, he had circulated draft language for an oral status report to the General Council on the same day in document JOB/IP/53, with an invitation to Members to comment by 16 November 2021. An agenda item for this status report had also been placed on the agenda of the General Council meeting scheduled for 22-23 November in the usual fashion. Since no comments had been received on the draft language, delegations had been informed on 17 November that the Chair would propose the text as circulated for adoption on 18 November. The language for the oral status report to the General Council which had been circulated in document JOB/IP/53 read as follows:
"At the meeting of the TRIPS Council on 15-16 October 2020, India and South Africa introduced document , requesting a waiver from certain provisions of the TRIPS Agreement for the prevention, containment and treatment of COVID-19, which had been circulated on 2 October 2020 and has since been co-sponsored by the delegations of Kenya, Eswatini, Mozambique, Pakistan, the Plurinational State of Bolivia; Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela; Mongolia; Zimbabwe; Egypt; the African Group; the LDC Group; the Maldives; Fiji; Namibia; Vanuatu; Indonesia and Jordan.
Since the introduction of the document, discussions took place in various formal and informal TRIPS Council meetings. Delegations exchanged views, asked questions, sought clarifications and provided replies, clarifications, and information, including through documents , , , and , on the waiver request.
On 21 May 2021 the co-sponsors issued a revised proposal which was circulated in document . The revised waiver request was presented at an informal open-ended meeting of the Council on 31 May, and introduced at its formal meeting on 8-9 June 2021. It has since been co-sponsored by Malaysia. On 29 September 2021, the co-sponsors circulated a summary of their interventions in document .
Since the last oral status report delivered on 7 October 2021, discussions continued in small-group consultations, at a formal meeting of 13-14 October, at informal open-ended meetings on 5 and 15 November, and at an informal and resumed formal meeting on 18 November 2021.
In the course of discussions on the revised waiver proposal, delegations held focused discussions on the topics of 'scope', both from the perspective of products and of IP rights, on 'duration', 'implementation' and on protection of undisclosed information. Delegations engaged positively and their detailed substantive exchanges helped clarify various aspects and nuances of positions. While delegations remain committed to the common goal of providing timely and secure access to high-quality, safe, efficacious and affordable vaccines and medicines for all, disagreement persists on the fundamental question of whether a waiver is the appropriate and most effective way to address the shortage and inequitable distribution of and access to vaccines and other COVID-19 related products.
In addition, a proposal for a draft General Council declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health in the circumstances of a pandemic, issued by the European Union and circulated in document , has also been discussed in meetings since its circulation on 21 June 2021. Delegations exchanged views, asked questions, sought clarifications and provided replies, clarifications, and information. Disagreement persists on the fundamental question of whether this proposal is the appropriate and most effective way to address the shortage and inequitable distribution of and access to vaccines and other COVID-19 related products.
This means that the TRIPS Council has not yet completed its consideration of the revised waiver request. The TRIPS Council will therefore continue its consideration of the revised waiver request, including through small-group consultations and informal open-ended meetings, and report back to the 12th Ministerial Conference as stipulated in Article IX:3 of the Marrakesh Agreement.
In addition, the TRIPS Council will also continue in the same manner its consideration of the other related proposals by Members."
93. The Chair proposed that the Council formally adopt the status report as a factual reflection of discussions on the TRIPS Waiver request.
94. The Council so agreed.
95. The Chair thanked delegations for their cooperation. He would deliver this report to the General Council, on 22-23 November, as agreed.
96. The representatives of India; the European Union; South Africa; Indonesia; Switzerland; the United Kingdom; and the United States took the floor.
97. The Chair said that, in line with the report that had been adopted, it was therefore understood that the agenda items 13 and 14 on the Council's agenda continued to remain open in order to permit more time for bilateral engagement, with a view to resuming – at short notice if necessary – the meeting, when there were indications that Members might be ready to reach an agreement.
98. For the next resumption of the Council's meeting, meeting room facilities were available for a formal resumption for Monday, 29 November 2021. This did not exclude the possibility of an earlier resumption at short notice should the circumstances require this.
99. The Chair encouraged delegations to remain seriously engaged, flexible and focused on an outcome, which remained within reach. The role of IP in the context of the pandemic had become the centre of attention in the run-up to this Ministerial Conference and a pragmatic and tangible outcome of these discussions would be a strong and positive signal to the Ministerial Conference and the global community as a whole. He would reach out to delegations to ensure that every opportunity to find possible landing zones ahead of MC12 would be used.
100. The Council took note of the statements made.
101. At the reconvened meeting on 29 November, the Chair suggested to take up agenda items 13 and 14 together, as most delegations were making one single statement covering both agenda items. He recalled that at the resumed meeting on 18 November, the Council had adopted an oral status report to the General Council, which he had delivered on 22 November 2021. This report had concluded that "the TRIPS Council will therefore continue its consideration of the revised waiver request, including through small-group consultations and informal open-ended meetings, and report back to the 12th Ministerial Conference as stipulated in Article IX:3 of the Marrakesh Agreement. In addition, the TRIPS Council will also continue in the same manner its consideration of the other related proposals by Members."
102. Since then, the Chair had held consultations with individual and groups of delegations, as well as a small-group consultation on 25 November. He had also circulated a draft report to the Ministerial Conference in document JOB/IP/54. However, in light of the indefinite postponement of the 12th Ministerial Conference, announced on 26 November 2021, the draft report was no longer proposed for adoption.
103. At the informal meeting that had preceded the this reconvened formal meeting, delegations had exchanged views on whether and how they wished to approach work on these items. He had shared his view that, although the much-awaited ministerial engagement on the important question of the role of IP in the pandemic had now been delayed, the Council could not afford to lose the momentum that had been gathering in the discussions among delegations during the previous week. From delegations' interventions in that meeting it was his sense that there was unanimous support for keeping the momentum of the discussions and continuing to engage on these matters, to try and harvest any outcome that may still be possible under the changed circumstances.
104. The representatives of South Africa; the European Union; India; the United Kingdom; Vanuatu; Indonesia; Chad, on behalf of the LDC Group; the Plurinational State of Bolivia; Pakistan; Brazil; Maldives; Switzerland; and Tanzania, on behalf of the African Group, took the floor.
105. The Chair said that he would consult with delegations to help facilitate continued engagement, and with a view to finding consensus on a substantive solution. He suggested that the agenda items remain open, with a view to resuming the meeting, at short notice, if necessary, when there are indications that Members might be closer to agreement on how to conclude these items. He noted that the next options for reconvening the Council's meeting were 10 and 16 December.
106. The Council so agreed.
107. The Chair thanked delegations for their engagement on this complex and highly politicized issue. He knew that all delegations shared the common goal of providing timely and secure access to high-quality, safe, efficacious and affordable vaccines and medicines for all, and all were working hard to narrow their differences on how this common goal could be achieved. He said he had heard the shared view that IP should not be a barrier to access to medicines, and that governments should be able to permit manufacturers that were able and ready to produce COVID-19 vaccines to start producing without worrying about a patent.
108. While the Chair regretted that the Council had not been able to reach consensus on a substantive recommendation to the 12th Ministerial Conference the previous week, he remained convinced that a pragmatic compromise solution was within reach, if the political will could be mustered. Although the Council must now continue its work without the political input from ministers, he recalled that a practical, tangible WTO response to the pandemic was needed, now more than ever. As the pandemic continued to challenge the world's sense of stability, it was important that the WTO reached agreement on meaningful responses to these challenges. He urged delegations to remain fully engaged with a sense of urgency, and with the objective to find a pragmatic consensus-based outcome. This is not the moment to let up, but rather – to quote Lord Tennyson – "to strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield."
109. At the reconvened meeting on 16 December, the Chair suggested to once again take up agenda items 13 and 14 together, as most delegations were making one single statement covering both agenda items. He reported that he had held consultations with a group of co-sponsors, and with a group of 'non-proponents', respectively, on 8 and 14 December. These separate meetings had not indicated any further engagement between these groups at delegation level since mid-November, nor had they revealed any movement in positions. The co-sponsors had re-iterated their calls for the urgent commencement of text-based negotiations on the basis of the revised waiver proposal document , while other delegations had seen no promise in any textual engagement as long as fundamental disagreements persisted on the merits of different approaches.
110. The Chair also indicated he had kept in touch with the Director General and DDG Gonzales with regard to their political contacts with Members. He invited delegations to share their views on recent developments and on next steps the Council should take in these matters.
111. The representatives of Argentina; South Africa; Mozambique; the European Union; Colombia; Pakistan; Brazil; Australia; Tanzania, on behalf of the African Group; the Plurinational State of Bolivia; Nigeria; China; the United States; New Zealand; Norway; Switzerland; Indonesia; India; and the United Kingdom took the floor.
112. The Chair said that what he had heard confirmed the impression he had gathered in the consultations with the two groups he had described earlier. On the one hand, there was the co- sponsors' insistence that textual engagement should be commenced based on the entirety of their proposal. On the other hand, there remained significant scepticism and outright opposition vis- à-vis the waiver approach among a number of delegations, who were therefore reluctant to engage on the basis of a text with whose underlying premise they disagree.
113. He recalled that, during the first small-group consultations in June, the text of the revised waiver had, in fact, been put on the screen with a view to discussing it – but the differences described above, and a certain lack of trust among delegations, meant that serious line-by-line engagement on that text had simply not been possible among delegations. Despite this, delegations had managed to have quite a number of meetings on substance and on additional proposals – and this was reflected in the reports to the General Council.
114. During the summer, the Chair said, it had been very much hoped that bilateral engagements among delegations would overcome these obstacles and lead to a situation where constructive engagement in the Council could be based on a pragmatic focus on common ground, but despite some encouraging signs along the way, this had ultimately not been the case. It was his impression, that these obstacles unfortunately still remained in place, and he was not able to detect any convergence towards a common ground for textual engagement that was any more promising than what had been attempted earlier in the year. To be precise, he said, he did not mean agreement on a text, but on a basis for engagement.
115. He said that, in the last few weeks leading up to the planned ministerial conference, it had been clear that Members were preparing for engagement at the political level at the conference. While it had been rightly pointed that the waiver was not formally part of the designated outcome of MC12 and could be addressed at the level of the TRIPS Council and the General Council, it had been clear to everybody, given the timing, that Members wanted those issues to be discussed at the conference. This was also reflected in the draft report that the Council was ready to adopt at the meeting on 29 November. In light of the postponement of MC12, Members had instead expressed their willingness and intention to intensify their engagement with each other. The TRIPS Council therefore had decided to stay in session, meaning that the Council could be reconvened at short notice.
116. The Chair said that, in the Heads of Delegations meeting held on 2 December he had shared with Members his personal assessment that another type of engagement was needed between members than what had been witnessed for some time. His first suggestion had been that delegations should focus more on what united them than on what divided them, referring also to the common objectives shared by Members.
117. His second suggestion had been that political engagement and input was needed to be able to change the current dynamic, input that had been anticipated from the ministerial conference. He had therefore urged members, in particular those who have taken a leading role in the discussions on these matters, to engage with each other, across the aisle, with a sense of urgency, not only here in Geneva, but also, and most importantly, at the political level. He was therefore encouraged by what he had heard from some members regarding such political engagement taking place now.
118. Against this background, the Chair believed that the best course of action for the immediate future was to let the on-going high-level engagement continue and mature. If a common approach to the discussions on these items could be developed among these Members, he said, this could hopefully contribute to unlocking the situation in the Council and allow all Members to take a step forward towards developing a consensus outcome. He had also taken note of Members underlining the need for transparency and inclusiveness, while welcoming engagement among a few Members. He said that it went without saying that any achievement among a small group of Members would have to be brought to the larger membership. He reiterated his belief that a practical, tangible WTO response to the pandemic is needed, now more than ever. If members focus on that, he also believed it was within reach.
119. In light of this, the Chair proposed that the Council once again keep the agenda items open, with a view to resuming the meeting – at short notice, if necessary – when there are indications that Members might be closer to a common understanding on how to proceed towards a possible landing zone and ultimately a consensus-based solution. In the meantime, he would remain in touch with delegations to keep abreast of any developments and would make practical arrangements to be able to resume whenever there were any new developments or a need to inform Members of the current state of play.
120. The Council so agreed.
121. At the reconvened meeting on 22 February 2022, the Chair suggested to once again take up agenda items 13 and 14 together, as had been the case in past meetings. The Chair recalled that, as indicated in his communication dated 11 February 2022, he had circulated draft language for an oral status report to the General Council in document JOB/IP/55 on 16 February 2022, with an invitation to Members to comment by 18 February 2022. An agenda item for this status report had also been placed on the agenda of the General Council meeting scheduled for 23-24 February in the usual fashion. Since no comments had been received on the draft language, delegations had been informed that the Chair would propose the text as circulated for adoption on 22 February 2022. The language for the oral status report to the General Council which had been circulated in document JOB/IP/55 read as follows:
At the meeting of the TRIPS Council on 15-16 October 2020, India and South Africa introduced document , requesting a waiver from certain provisions of the TRIPS Agreement for the prevention, containment and treatment of COVID-19, which had been circulated on 2 October 2020 and has since been co-sponsored by the delegations of Kenya, Eswatini, Mozambique, Pakistan, Bolivia, Venezuela, Mongolia, Zimbabwe, Egypt, the African Group, the LDC Group, the Maldives, Fiji, Namibia, Vanuatu, Indonesia and Jordan.
Since the introduction of the document, discussions took place in various formal and informal TRIPS Council meetings. Delegations exchanged views, asked questions, sought clarifications and provided replies, clarifications, and information, including through documents , , , and , on the waiver request.
On 21 May 2021 the co-sponsors issued a revised proposal which was circulated in document . The revised waiver request was presented at an informal open-ended meeting of the Council on 31 May, and introduced at its formal meeting on 8-9 June 2021. It has since been co-sponsored by Malaysia and Argentina. On 29 September 2021, the co-sponsors circulated a summary of their interventions in document .
Status reports on the considerations by the TRIPS Council on the revised "Proposal for a Waiver from Certain Provisions of the TRIPS Agreement for the Prevention, Containment and Treatment of COVID-19" were delivered to the General Council on 34 March, 5-6 May, 27 July, 7 October and, most recently, on 22 November 2021.
In the course of discussions on the revised waiver proposal, delegations held focused discussions on the topics of 'scope', both from the perspective of products and of IP rights, on 'duration', 'implementation' and on protection of undisclosed information. Delegations engaged positively and their detailed substantive exchanges helped clarify various aspects and nuances of positions. While delegations remain committed to the common goal of providing timely and secure access to high quality, safe, efficacious and affordable vaccines and medicines for all, disagreement persists on the fundamental question of whether a waiver is the appropriate and most effective way to address the shortage and inequitable distribution of and access to vaccines and other COVID related products.
In addition, a proposal for a draft General Council declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health in the circumstances of a pandemic, issued by the European Union and circulated in document , has also been discussed in meetings since its circulation on 21 June 2021. Delegations exchanged views, asked questions, sought clarifications and provided replies, clarifications, and information. Disagreement persists on the fundamental question of whether this proposal is the appropriate and most effective way to address the shortage and inequitable distribution of and access to vaccines and other COVID-related products.
This means that the TRIPS Council has not yet completed its consideration of the revised waiver request. The TRIPS Council will therefore continue its consideration of the revised waiver request, and report back to the General Council as stipulated in Article IX:3 of the Marrakesh Agreement.
In addition, the TRIPS Council will also continue in the same manner its consideration of the other related proposals by Members.
122. The Chair proposed that the Council formally adopt the status report as a factual reflection of discussions on the TRIPS Waiver request.
123. The Council so agreed.
124. The Chair thanked delegations for their cooperation and said he would deliver this report to the General Council, on 23-24 February, as agreed. He recalled that, given the upcoming opportunities for delegations to place formal statements on the record at the General Council and at the next formal meeting of the TRIPS Council on 9-10 March, he was not intending to open the floor under this agenda item, and he thanked delegations for their cooperation in this regard.
125. The Secretariat briefly announced that a Secretariat Briefing on the TRIPS Council intended for new delegations would be held on 1 March 2022.
126. At the reconvened meeting of 18 November, the report to the General Council was adopted and the Chair said that, it was therefore understood that the agenda items 13 and 14 on the Council's agenda continued to remain open in order to permit more time for bilateral engagement, with a view to resuming – at short notice if necessary – the meeting, when there were indications that Members might be ready to reach an agreement. [see paragraphs 93-99]
127. At the reconvened meeting of 29 November, the Chair proposed to take agenda items 13 and 14 together, as delegations had been making a single statement. [see paragraphs 100-107]
128. At the reconvened meeting of 16 December, the Chair proposed to take agenda items 13 and 14 together, as delegations had been making a single statement. [see paragraphs 108-119]
IP/C/M/103, IP/C/M/103/Add.1, IP/C/M/103/Rev.1