Good Day BIO: Where things stand on TRIPS

August 19, 2021
We have an update on what’s been happening at the WTO with the TRIPS waiver and why it’s still a bad idea—plus, Genomatica’s new partnership with lululemon. (772 words, 3 minutes, 51 seconds)
BIO

We have an update on what’s been happening at the WTO with the TRIPS waiver and why it’s still a bad idea—plus, Genomatica’s new partnership with lululemon. (772 words, 3 minutes, 51 seconds)

 

Where things stand on TRIPS

 
 

It’s been a while since we’ve talked about what’s going on at the WTO. Here’s the latest news—and why the proposed waiver of vaccine IP is still a bad idea.

The status: The World Trade Organization (WTO) is still considering a proposal backed by India and South Africa (and supported by the U.S.) to waive the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) for vaccine technology—though the WTO is on a six-week summer holiday until September 6, per reports.

We’ll say it again: If IP rights are waived, we’ll compromise global vaccination efforts, says BIO President and CEO Dr. Michelle McMurry-Heath in a new STAT News op-ed

The waiver would make vaccines MORE expensive. The average cost of a new vaccine manufacturing facility is $700 million, she explains. Additionally, a waiver could cause competition for raw materials, leading to price increases of materials and, ultimately, vaccines. 

But vaccines are already low-cost or free. India and South Africa are currently paying $8 and $5.25 per dose, respectively—lower than the annual flu shot in the U.S. ($14), for perspective. And COVAX is set to deliver 2 billion doses to countries that cannot afford to purchase them, with the U.S. set to donate 500 million more doses by the end of the summer. 

Companies are set to manufacture enough doses in 2021 to fully vaccinate 70% of people worldwide, according to a recent Duke University study from its Global Health Innovation Center, as Hilary Stiss, BIO’s Senior Manager for International Affairs, told us. 

TRIPS would set a bad precedent with regards to IP protection—with a ripple effect throughout the biotech sector in the U.S. “The innovation coming out of our 48 state affiliates and their member companies bolsters a robust economy across the country. We cannot afford to lose IP protections that advance these critical discoveries,” warns Michele Oshman, BIO’s VP for External Affairs and Executive Director of the Council of State Bioscience Associations (CSBA). 

The bottom line: “To be sure, the United States and other wealthy nations still need to give considerably more. But the fact remains that ramping up production in bona fide facilities and donating doses are the most straightforward steps to producing the vaccine doses needed to end the pandemic,” concludes Dr. Michelle McMurry-Heath. “The effort to strip intellectual property rights, by contrast, would put success against the global scourge of COVID-19 even further out of reach.”

 
 
 
Twitter
 
LinkedIn
 
Facebook
 
 

Genomatica teams up with lululemon

 
 

BIO member Genomatica yesterday announced a collaboration with lululemon athletica inc. to produce plant-based nylon with a reduced environmental impact—another example of how the athleisure megabrand is using biotechnology. 

Plant-based nylons are a greener alternative to petroleum-based materials, which generate greenhouse gases in their production and are not biodegradable, according to Fast Company.

“Genomatica uses biotechnology and fermentation to convert plant-based ingredients into widely used chemical building blocks, like those used to make nylon,”says the press release

Genomatica will work to incorporate this renewable nylon into the supply chain of lululemon, a top-10 global athletic apparel company, impacting more than half of the synthetic materials lululemon produces.

“This unique collaboration will help meet increasing consumer demand for more environmentally friendly products,” said Genomatica CEO Christophe Schilling. A Genomatica survey of 2,000 teens and adults found most would shop for environmentally sustainable clothes, if they knew how. 

Just a month ago, lululemon announced a partnership with another BIO member, LanzaTech. They're working together to make the world's first fabric using polyester made from recycled carbon emissions, LanzaTech announced. 

Biotech companies making greener clothing matters. The global textile industry is one of the world’s largest polluters, according to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation—and conventional nylon is a major culprit, responsible for 60 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions per year through traditional crude oil-based production. 

Listen: BIO's Dr. Michelle talked to LanzaTech's CEO about how biotech is making the fashion industry more sustainable.

Read more on how biobased manufacturing is helping the planet.

 

More Agriculture and Environment News: 

The New York Times: What if you could become invisible to mosquitoes?
“Using CRISPR, scientists have taken the first step toward creating a mosquito that is blind to human hosts.”

 
 
 
Twitter
 
LinkedIn
 
Facebook
 
 
BIO Beltway Report
BIO Beltway Report
 
Paragraph (sm) - Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Quis ipsum suspendisse ultrices gravida. Risus commodo viverra maecenas accumsan lacus vel facilisis sample link.
 

President Biden’s Thursday: Meeting with the national security team to discuss the situation in Afghanistan. The White House announced a range of efforts in the fight against COVID yesterday, including recommending a booster shot, seeking to force nursing homes to require staff vaccinations, and directing his education secretary to push back against governors who won’t require masks in schools, The New York Times reports. Booster shots could be available beginning the week of September 20, per CNBC

What’s Happening on Capitol Hill: Recess. 

 
 
Paragraph (normal) - Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Quis ipsum suspendisse ultrices gravida. Risus commodo viverra maecenas accumsan lacus sample link.
 
Twitter
 
LinkedIn
 
Facebook