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

H.E. Ambassador Dr Lansana GBERIE
13 PARAGRAPH 8 OF THE MINISTERIAL DECISION ON THE TRIPS AGREEMENT ADOPTED ON 17 JUNE 2022

291.   The Sri Lankan delegation would like to thank you, Chair, for initiating discussions on the way forward on this issue, as this is a very important decision to take from a public health perspective. 292.   We would like to highlight that on 15 June 2021, the Directors-Generals of the World Health Organization (WHO), the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and the World Trade Organization (WTO) issued a joint statement in which they underscored their "commitment to universal, equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines, therapeutics, diagnostics, and other health technologies". 293.   Further, on 27 September 2021, WHO, WIPO and WTO jointly organized a workshop which addressed the importance of realizing global equitable access for vaccines, diagnostics, therapeutics and other COVID-19 health technologies; mechanisms and processes to support technology transfer and intellectual property licensing; and enabling factors and policies for technology transfer. 294.   On 29 June 2022, Dr Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the WHO noted "on COVID-19, driven by BA.4 and BA.5 in many places, cases are on the rise in 110 countries, causing overall global cases to increase by 20% and deaths have risen in three of the six WHO regions". 295.   On 16 February 2022, the International Monetary Fund recognized that "in this environment, our best defense is to move from a singular focus on vaccines to ensuring each country has equitable access to a comprehensive COVID-19 toolkit with vaccines, tests, and treatments". 296.   The world is now experiencing an evolution of the COVID-19 pandemic. It is observed that antibodies triggered by vaccination are less effective in responding to new variants of the pandemic, and even vaccinated people with boosters are vulnerable to multiple infections of new variants. Still people continue to die from COVID-19 and new variants of the pandemic due to limited access to life-saving treatments in many parts of the world. 297.   Besides that, the crucial role of therapeutics and diagnostics in controlling COVID-19 is undisputed. Diagnostics are critical for effective use of therapeutics. Testing helps to identify new COVID-19 variants and to develop effective vaccines and therapeutics. They are recommended increasingly by WHO as well as by national strategies as part of test-and-treat strategies. 298.   However, testing in developing countries, especially in least developed countries (LDCs), remains absurdly low. Therapeutics and diagnostics for controlling COVID-19 recommended by the WHO are either unavailable or unaffordable for most developing countries, mainly due to significant supply constraints and limited numbers of manufacturers, particularly for new therapeutics. 299.   We fully concur with the concerns expressed on the low level of daily COVID-19 tests per thousand people reported in many developing countries. If I speak of the situation in my country, it stands at 0.06% in Sri Lanka as of June 2022. The hospitals are not carrying out PCR tests on suspected cases and they can only rely on rapid antigen tests (RATs) in view of the high cost involved in PCR testing, as the government cannot continue to afford and fund the provision of such facilities to its population free of charge. 300.   Such empirical data reveals the imbalance in the area of use of diagnostic tests, as they are not easily accessible for low and lower middle-income countries. If these countries had access to generic versions of PCR testing kits at affordable cost, then PCR testing could be increased for tracing the positive cases for further treatment. In Sri Lanka, though the daily new confirmed cases due to COVID-19 remains at somewhat low levels, the actual situation may reveal a different picture, if we can test cases using PCR test methods. 301.   It is also important to note that the treatment landscape is constantly evolving. Many clinical trials are underway and thus no single therapeutic is sufficient. It has been identified that different therapeutics are applicable at different stages of COVID-19. 302.   Intellectual property monopolies, especially relating to patents, remain a major barrier to scaling up production and to facilitating equitable access. According to WIPO, there are considerably more patent filings related to therapeutics than on vaccines, at an approximately 4:1 ratio. 303.   For some therapeutics, there may not be a need for voluntary licences that are required for supply. In some cases voluntary licences exclude supplying many developing countries, and even for countries included, voluntary licences are subject to various conditions that are often difficult for developing countries to comply with. Supply constraints are expected to continue even for products for which voluntary licences do exist. 304.   Therefore, extending the scope of the TRIPS Decision beyond vaccines to cover therapeutics and diagnostics could secure the availability of compulsory licences to override the patent barriers to production and export, as equitable and affordable access to therapeutics and diagnostics still remains a massive challenge for developing countries and LDCs. In this backdrop, the Sri Lankan delegation would like to re-emphasize that the TRIPS Decision needs to be extended to cover the production and supply of COVID-19 diagnostics and therapeutics. 305.   Sri Lanka echoes the concerns expressed by co-sponsors of the proposal document IP/C/W/669/Rev.1, particularly in relation to a lack of clarity on the way forward and dragging of the process by some Members, which might delay reaching the final outcome on the remaining Ministerial Decision by the end of 2022. 306.   It is commendable that the TRIPS Council has already started discussions on this matter and aims to make progress, however, we believe that the TRIPS Council should provide clarity on how discussions will be taken forward and accelerated so that a meaningful decision may be taken within the stipulated time frame as per the MC12 Decision. 307.   We believe that studies and reports presented by reputed international organizations working on these issues, including WHO and WIPO and several submissions put forward by the co-sponsors, have already emphasized and shown enough evidence through facts and figures to prove the importance of addressing IP-related challenges to expanding production and providing equitable and affordable access to all COVID-19 products including vaccines, therapeutics, diagnostics, and other essential medical goods including their inputs, for the current and future pandemics. 308.   Substantial discussions have already taken place on this matter during the negotiations prior to MC12 and there is no justification for exploratory factual discussions which can delay the adoption of this decision, which contributes to addressing a public health emergency. 309.   Further, our ministers emphasized this decision by adopting the Ministerial Declaration on the WTO response to the COVID-19 pandemic and preparedness for future pandemics at MC12 as well. Therefore, we urge Members to seriously consider this timeline ahead of us and work positively, constructively and meaningfully to deliver this significant decision within the stipulated time. 310.   My delegation would continue to engage in all future discussions on this very important file constructively, as this matter is about public health of human life on this planet. We would like to emphasize that any process going forward should be open, inclusive, and transparent and allow all Members to be heard.

The Council so agreed.
61. The Chair recalled that under paragraph 8 of the Ministerial Decision on the TRIPS Agreement, adopted on 17 June 2022, Members had agreed to make a decision within six months from adoption, on whether to extend this Decision to cover the production and supply of COVID-19 diagnostics and therapeutics. Since the last formal meeting of the Council in July, Members had held two dedicated informal open-ended meetings on this issue - on 19 September and on 3 October 2022. At the first meeting, Members had shared their views on which key issues would need to be discussed to enable Members to take a decision by the prescribed deadline in December.
62. A number of Members had expressed their readiness to move ahead with an extension of the Decision to therapeutics and diagnostics. Other Members had called for an evidence- and fact-based analysis to identify supply side constraints and any IP-related barriers to access to individual therapeutics and diagnostics. A number of delegations had raised the question of the scope of an extension of the Decision, including possibilities for a definition of 'therapeutics and diagnostics'. Some delegations also indicated the need for a list of individual products to be covered. After the meeting, a number of Members had informally shared their questions and analysis in writing with all Members.
63. The Chair said that, based on this discussion, he had set out a schedule of dedicated meetings until December in order to map out the path forward, which he had circulated on 21 September 2022.
64. The second dedicated informal open-ended meeting on the issue had taken place on 3 October 2022. At that meeting, a number of delegations had provided responses to questions circulated after the previous meeting. Detailed interventions had given examples of product definitions from national legislation, and had shared information on the licensing and supply situation of certain therapeutic products used to treat COVID-19. Other delegations had requested evidence on concrete IP-related barriers and indicated that their internal information-gathering and consultation exercises were still on-going. Many delegations had argued that the differences in use, production and distribution between vaccines on the one hand, and therapeutics and diagnostics on the other, meant that a solution for these products also needed to be different from that for vaccines. He said that he had once again invited delegations to share these detailed statements in writing and he hoped this would be the case soon.
65. Most Members who had taken the floor had also emphasized again that the negotiation process on this question should continue in an open, transparent, and inclusive manner, and that all Members needed to be heard on the development of any outcome.
66. The Chair said that he had reported on these meetings to the General Council on 25 July and on 6 October. As mentioned in his last report, while heartened by the engagement and the efforts that delegations had clearly made – to formulate questions and to provide detailed responses – it was his sense that Members would need to focus on concrete outcomes of our discussion very soon, in order to meet the approaching December deadline. He therefore encouraged delegations to start considering which concrete form their respective proposed outcome decision should take – and ideally propose concrete text, so that other delegations could take a view on this basis.
67. The representatives of South Africa; Maldives; Kenya, on behalf of the ACP Group; Malaysia; Bangladesh, on behalf of the LDC Group; Colombia; Indonesia; Sri Lanka; Egypt; Argentina; Bolivia, Plurinational State of; Brazil; China; Uruguay; Peru; Singapore; Switzerland; Chinese Taipei; the United States of America; Mexico; the European Union; Japan; Canada; Korea, Republic of; India; the United Kingdom; Nigeria; and the World Health Organization (WHO) took the floor.
68. The Chair thanked Members for a rich discussion, and for their serious engagement on this matter. He said he was very much aware that the time until 17 December 2022 was short – and that, in order to take a meaningful decision by that deadline, Members would have to focus on concrete steps very soon. Judging from the interventions at the informal open-ended meetings and today, there were currently a wide range of views held by Members in this regard. In his view, they included at least the following positions:
a. those who wished to extend the current decision "as is" to therapeutics and diagnostics without any additional language or definition;
b. those who wished to see concrete evidence of IP barriers before considering an extension to therapeutics and diagnostics; and finally
c. those who were looking to include a definition, or to agree a concrete list of products to be covered by an extension of the TRIPS Decision to therapeutics and diagnostics.
69. In view of the deadline for a decision in December, he said he would suggest the following approach. As the Council's next open-ended informal meeting dedicated to this issue was just over two weeks away – scheduled for 2 November 2022 – he urged delegations to use the time until that meeting to engage bilaterally and to address concerns and information queries, as these would otherwise take up too much time in the open-ended meetings.
70. He also requested that, by the time of the next meeting on 2 November, all delegations that had a view on what the Council should decide, should make concrete textual proposals for such a Council decision in writing. As he had indicated before, such textual proposals for a decision should be circulated in writing before that meeting, so that these could be a basis for discussion at the meeting. These could be position papers, outlines, detailed drafts, or fully formulated decisions but it was his sense that such concrete textual options were necessary to focus the discussions ahead of the December deadline. He also indicated that, if the discussions did not concretize on concrete textual options at the next meeting, he would consider a more intense consultative process to drive this process forward.
71. Given that this was the last formal meeting planned for this year, he suggested to keep this agenda item open with a view to resuming in formal mode before 17 December in order to take a decision as prescribed by paragraph 8 of the Ministerial Decision.
72. The Council so agreed.
73. At a resumed meeting of the Council on 15 December 2022, the Chair recalled that the Council had kept discussions under this item open at its meeting on 12-13 October 2022. Since then, the Council had held informal meetings on this matter on 2 and 22 November, and on 6 and 15 December, including directly preceding the current formal meeting. In these meetings, Members agreed that the Council should report the state of play of discussions under this item to the General Council by the expiry of the deadline specified in paragraph 8 of the Ministerial Decision.
74. Against that background, he had circulated a draft report for a factual and neutral reflection of the state of play, as well as for a forward-looking element, on 7 December 2022 in document with an invitation for Members to provide comments. The item had also been placed on the agenda of the General Council meeting scheduled for 19-20 December in the usual fashion.
75. He said that, having received comments on the draft, he had held consultations with a group of interested Members on 12 and 14 December, and the matter had been further discussed in an openended informal meeting of the Council on 15 December, immediately preceding this formal session.
76. Although these discussions had been inconclusive, he still believed that the amended language of his proposed draft report circulated in was the best chance of reaching consensus. He said he would refrain from reading out the entire text at this meeting, and simply propose that the Council adopt the draft report as circulated in document .
77. The representatives of South Africa; Sri Lanka; Switzerland; the United Kingdom; the United States of America; and the European Union took the floor.
78. Resuming in formal mode later on the same day, the Chair said it was his impression that there was no consensus on adopting a report to the General Council under this agenda item, and that he would therefore report to the General Council under his own responsibility next week.
79. The representatives of Sri Lanka; South Africa; Switzerland; the United Kingdom; Tanzania; Singapore; and Egypt took the floor.
80. The Chair said he would suspend the agenda item one more time, and that he would call a meeting the following day, if Members would be able to find an agreed solution that could then be adopted by all Members.
81. At a resumed meeting of the Council on 16 December 2022 the Chair proposed that the following text – also displayed on the screen in the room – be adopted as the Council's report to the General Council:
"In view of paragraph 8 of the Ministerial Decision on the TRIPS Agreement adopted on 17 June 2022 providing that
[n]o later than six months from the date of this Decision, Members will decide on its extension to cover the production and supply of COVID-19 diagnostics and therapeutics
the TRIPS Council recommends that the General Council extend the deadline."
82. The Council so agreed.
83. The representative of Switzerland took the floor.
IP/C/M/106, IP/C/M/106/Add.1