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Von der Leyen: EU ready to discuss COVID vaccine patent waiver

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European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Thursday that the European Union is willing to discuss a proposal, now backed by the United States, to waive intellectual property rights for COVID-19 vaccines, according to Reuters. 

The head of the EU executive explained that the bloc’s vaccination effort was accelerating, with 30 Europeans inoculated per second, while exporting more than 200 million vaccine doses to the rest of the world. 

„The EU is also ready to discuss any proposals that address the crisis in an effective and pragmatic manner,” said von der Leyen in a speech to the European University Institute in Florence.

„That’s why we are ready to discuss how the U.S. proposal for a waiver on intellectual property protections for COVID-19 vaccines could help achieve that objective,” added von der Leyen.

South Africa and India made the initial vaccine waiver proposal at the World Trade Organization in October, gathering support from a large number of developing countries who say it is a vital step to make vaccines more widely available.
 

The World Health Organization said in April that of 700 million vaccines globally administered, only 0.2% had been in low-income countries.

Until now, the European Union has been with a group of countries, many of them home to large pharmaceutical companies, including Britain and Switzerland, that have opposed the waiver.

They argue it would undermine incentives for companies who have produced vaccines in record time to do so in a future pandemic. They also say waiving patents would not instantly resolve the problem, with a lack of sufficient manufacturing capacity.

The United States said on Wednesday it supported the waiver, although trade chief Katherine Tai cautioned that negotiations would take time.

Von der Leyen said that, in the short run, the European Union called upon all vaccine producing countries to allow exports and to avoid measures that disrupt supply chains.