Why the TRIPS waiver wouldn’t work

April 20, 2021
Yesterday, BIO’s Dr. Michelle McMurry-Heath sent a letter to USTR explaining why the WTO’s proposed TRIPS waiver would have global health and economic consequences—we have the details. And continuing our special Earth Day coverage, we look at how biotech is helping to…
BIO

Yesterday, BIO’s Dr. Michelle McMurry-Heath sent a letter to USTR explaining why the WTO’s proposed TRIPS waiver would have global health and economic consequences—we have the details. And continuing our special Earth Day coverage, we look at how biotech is helping to clean up transportation. (763 words, 3 minutes, 48 seconds)

 

Why the TRIPS waiver wouldn’t work

 
 

BIO President and CEO Dr. Michelle McMurry-Heath sent a letter yesterday to U.S. Trade Representative Ambassador Katherine Tai, to explain why the WTO’s proposed “TRIPS waiver” would have global health and economic consequences as the pandemic rages on. 

ICYMI: India, South Africa, and some U.S. Senators claim a waiver of the WTO Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement would facilitate COVID-19 vaccine development. But as Hans Sauer, BIO’s Deputy General Counsel for Intellectual Property, explained in an article published yesterday by IP Watchdog, IP rights enable development.

At a WTO conference on COVID-19 equity last Wednesday, Ambassador Tai said she discussed the issue with Indian and South African officials and emphasized that developing countries must have equal access to vaccines. 

BIO agrees on the need for access: “We call for the U.S. and other countries to prioritize the distribution of vaccines to the most at-risk patients” around the globe. 

However: “forced transfer of vaccine technology by WTO members will only impel countries to try to go it alone in terms of supplying vaccines,” resulting in supply and capacity problems. 

Furthermore, weakening IP protections hurts U.S. workers, by giving “license to other countries—some of them our economic competitors—to hollow-out our world leading biotechnology base, export jobs abroad, and undermine incentives to invest in such technologies in the future.” 

The biotechnology industry is already prioritizing access. “Over 900 companies around the world, over 70% of them small enterprises, and 50% of them in the United States, have redirected their limited resources from other vital health research into COVID,” says the letter—and these companies are forging partnerships to ensure access to vaccines and treatments worldwide.

What’s the solution? Similar sacrifice from governments. BIO specifically urges the United States to “devote significantly more resources to multilateral and unilateral efforts to procure vaccines for low-and middle-income countries.” 

Read BIO’s full letter.

Read more about the issue in IP Watchdog.

 
 
 
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How biotech is fueling climate solutions

 
 

With the International Energy Agency predicting a major surge in CO2 production this year, the Biden administration is looking to reassert U.S. leadership on climate, hosting a two-day virtual summit of world leaders that kicks off on Earth Day (Thursday). Ahead of the event, we’ve been looking at ways in which biotech solutions can help us meet our climate policy goals—and especially reducing the footprint of transportation.

Transportation is the greatest source of greenhouse gases (GHG) in the United States, contributing about 28% of the country’s total GHG emissions, according to the EPA

But biotech is helping to clean it up. Sustainable biofuels are a vital tool in reducing GHG emissions and are produced by several BIO member companies. For example: 

Gevo makes low-carbon jet fuel made from renewable plant material and genetic engineering that works with the current petro-based fuel delivery systems. 

Listen: Gevo CEO Pat Gruber on the I AM BIO Podcast 

LanzaTech recycles waste industrial gases produced in steelmaking and other heavy industry to make ethanol that can be used for low-carbon products such as aviation fuel. The company is already working with airlines including Virgin Atlantic and Japan’s All Nippon Airways

POET is the world’s largest producer of biofuels, making them from both grain and non-grain cellulose. The company also captures carbon dioxide at some of their plants for reuse in food processing, water treatment, fire suppression, and agriculture. 

In addition to sustainable fuels, the biofuel produced by these companies has been used to clean up fragrances and make much-needed hand sanitizers during the pandemic.

Read more about what BIO and the Biden administration are doing to support the development of sustainable aviation fuel.


More Agriculture and Environment News:

The New York Times: The Fed faces criticism as it wades into climate and equity issues
“The Federal Reserve is proudly politically independent. That makes key discussions around climate change and racial inequity a balancing act.”

 
 
 
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President Biden’s Tuesday: Meeting with leaders of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. In the afternoon, taking a virtual tour of Proterra, an electric bus maker in South Carolina, followed by remarks on how his American Jobs Plan is intended to reduce bus emissions to zero by 2030.

What’s Happening on Capitol Hill: The Senate Appropriations Committee will hold a hearing on the American Jobs Plan, infrastructure, and climate change, including some Cabinet Secretaries, while the House holds several hearings on climate change: climate and justiceclimate and job creation; and the global fight against climate change. The House Judiciary Committee is scheduled to mark up its version of The COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act. The House Appropriations Committee has scheduled a hearing on Food Nutrition and Consumer Services with the USDA.

 

 
 
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