The four main parties to negotiations on an intellectual property waiver for Covid-19 vaccines have prepared an "outcome document" for approval by the broader membership, the WTO said on Tuesday, with its chief hoping for a final deal by June.
WTO director-general Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who has made vaccine equity her top priority since taking office in 2021, has been working for months to broker a compromise between the United States, the European Union, India and South Africa to break an 18-month-long impasse, reports Reuters.
"What the discussions were aiming at was coming up with something workable," Okonjo-Iweala told Reuters, saying she hoped the WTO's 164 members would finalise and approve the proposal by a major conference in June. "This will advance the discussion and dialogue. For the next pandemic or a flare up of this one, this is hugely important," she said.
The document showed that there were still unresolved areas in the draft deal, including on the duration of the waiver's application which could be either three or five years.
Okonjo-Iweala said recent negotiations had focused on getting broader support for the proposal, including from China. She said Beijing had indicated it was "favourably disposed" to being considered as a developed country in this deal and thus subject to stricter rules. The Chinese mission to the WTO in Geneva did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
All 164 members of the WTO must accept the deal by consensus for it to pass and the topic will be raised at a closed-door meeting on Friday. One delegate said it would be critical that the main four parties vocalise strong backing publicly in order to convince others. "If not, doubts will linger and other members stay hesitant," he said.
In past sessions, the United Kingdom and Switzerland -- which have opposed a broad waiver on the grounds that it stifles pharmaceutical research -- have complained of the lack of transparency in the four-party talks.
Medical charity MSF urged countries to reject the proposal.
"It does not provide a meaningful solution to facilitate increasing people's access to needed medical tools during the pandemic...and in fact would set a negative precedent for future global health challenges," it said.