Saturday, 9 January 2021

2020 in the Annals of History

Ending a decade with an year like 2020!

2020 began like any other year except that it was end of a decade. We all entered into it with the wishes of a happy, healthy and prosperous new year as we wished everyone this year.

 

Fresh with New Year resolutions, Jan and Feb are the motivational months to act on the promises made on New Year's Eve. Roads full of joggers is a pretty common site and so were Jan-Feb 2020. Lives were all business as usual until we entered into March 2020 when we were in for the biggest shocks of our lifetime. A pandemic that brought a bigger economic upheaval than the global economic crisis of 2008, that wreaked havoc in the lives of rich and poor alike, yet led bare the global inequalities. It impacted people from every walk of life, of every age, every sector of economy, the lives and livelihoods alike. Yet we are beginning the New Year with the developed world holding assured access to Covid vaccines and developing countries left to fend off for themselves in a market where most of the supply is pre-purchased by rich economies. Fortunately, with the approval of two vaccines by the pharmacy of the world in first week of 2021, there's a ray of hope in the developing world.

 

Personally, 2020 has been a saviour for me, more than once. I was so thankful to God that I left China in first week of December 2019 after a week-long official visit to Beijing on a workshop related to Intellectual Property Rights. It happened again in early Feb 2020 that we visited Venice to witness the beauty that is Venice carnival, one of the most famous carnivals in the world, for a weekend and after getting back to Geneva, learnt that Covid had broken out in Italy by middle of February. Being in the right place at right time, is something that happens just with luck!

 

With the month of March it felt like sun has set over the planet and world would be staring at a dark winter. It all came so sudden. Locked down at your homes and you don't know due to what fault of yours. Suddenly, the shelves at grocery stores were empty, pharmacies ran out of masks and sanitizers, social media was stuffed with infodemic, conspiracy theories, diet recommendations to boost your immune system and what not. Screen time went anywhere up to 10-15 hours a day and it felt as if one is getting trapped in a sea of anxiety- the mental toll of coronavirus. But some were even more unfortunate. Those who did not have roofs to isolate, food to eat, bare minimum to make ends meet, set foot for a long march from cities to villages. 

 

Covid changed the perspective from which we looked at our surroundings and at ourselves. Humanity came out pouring in the form of selfless service by healthcare professionals, by the police and administrative agencies, by the Gurudwaras that served free food, by humans towards their fellow beings. Some connected with their families like never before. But for diplomats, who usually stay long distances apart from their families, Covid breakout was a challenging time. Indian diplomats throughout the world mounted an unprecedented task of repatriating the lakhs of stranded Indians in different corners of world. In such situations, one realises what service to the nation entails.

 

For myself, all alone in a foreign land more than 7000km away from India, I suddenly woke up to the utter shock that you could no longer travel back home (for your home is always where heart is-for me it can't be anywhere other than India), no longer go to WTO, no longer go to office, to your colleague's or friend's place and all you could do is just sit at your house and utilize the time to bring out the best in you. I learned painting, cooking, bonding with family over virtual morning yoga session and virtual prayer meet in the evening. It was the best way to kill the loneliness! 

 

Then April came as a turning point in my professional life. While the multilateral activity was all shut due to the local restrictions banning public gathering of more than 5 people, we began some thinking as to how could India help in management of Covid crisis and bringing back the 'normalcy' through our efforts at WTO. Those initial months were full of hoarding of masks, PPEs, sanitizers, medical gloves, and practically every Covid essential. There were many emerging situations in different parts of the world where it appeared that Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) were posing a barrier to rapid scaling up of manufacturing of Covid essentials. Like 3M masks which were protected by design patents, ventilators whose components were protected by multiple IPRs, were already disrupting the steady flow of Covid products throughout the globe. For example-during the COVID-19 outbreak, an Italian hospital ran out of ventilator valves (which cost $11,000 each) and their regular supplier could not produce them on time. After scanning an existing valve, replacement valves were 3D printed costing about $1 each which has saved 10 lives to date. However a law firm cites this exact example to warn that 3D printing (eg of ventilator valves) may violate patents or industrial designs on the valves or other medical equipment and there can also be copyright issues with the digital model/computer aided design (CAD) file.

 

We realised that the multilateral framework that provides for IPR protection as an incentive for innovation that worked fine in normal times, needs to be flexible to respond to a pandemic of such an overwhelming nature like Covid19. We foresaw the situation when safe and effective proven vaccines would emerge, there was going to be a tremendous shortfall unless the few suppliers, majorly the big pharma companies, did not engage in unconditional, transparent licensing to all the valid manufacturers who had the capacity for vaccine production or widely share the technology behind vaccine production without enforcing IPRs. And as few months passed, we realized our worst fears coming true.

 

Amid this backdrop, India and South Africa introduced a proposal in WTO for a temporary waiver from certain sections of WTO TRIPS Agreement for effective treatment, prevention and containment of Covid-19 in October 2020. The objective of the waiver is to prevent IPR barriers to rapid scaling up of vaccines, therapeutics, diagnostics and other Covid19 related medical products so that timely delivery of such products can be ensured to 7.8 billion global population. Today the Proposal is co-sponsorder by 10 WTO Members. It has generated widespread support from most of the WTO Members, numerous civil society organisations, political leaders, scientific community, global leaders including DG, WHO. Pandemic being an extraordinary crisis demands out of box solutions and in such crisis situations, multilateral institutions can remain relevant only by adjusting to the global needs. 

 

Not only will this initiative save millions of lives, by ensuring access to vaccines for all, it will accelerate our path to 'normalcy' and hence, global economic recovery. It will help to prevent the loss of years of progress on SDGs. With the emergence of new Covid strains or variants, the world has once again witnessed that no one is safe until everyone is safe. Sectors like tourism, travel and hospitality, business, aviation etc. will continue to suffer throughout the world unless there's a confidence in consumers that vaccines are not only there to protect them but also will be made accessible to them in an affordable and timely manner. Therefore, the waiver is a win-win situation for all, developed and developing world alike. While discovery of vaccines was a test of science, delivering them equitably in a timely and affordable manner is a test of humanity. Will WTO deliver on this test, remains to be seen.

 

A Happy New Year to all and hope this would be a healthy year where everyone will have access to Covid vaccines and world would be able to enter 'post Covid' phase in 2021.

 

An opinion on the issue by Indian Ambassador to WTO can be accessed at-

 

https://opinion.inquirer.net/136836/science-has-delivered-will-the-wto-deliver