Thank you very much.
Thank you for your invitation.
My remarks today will be about intellectual property with respect to COVID‑19 vaccines, and about ways of reviewing institutional structures to make vaccine production faster and more equitable in Canada and abroad during pandemics, and I'm not talking only about COVID‑19.
I have over 150 publications to my credit and my area of specialization is political economy in the pharmaceuticals sector. Apart from my role as an expert witness for Justice Canada in connection with a trial on the regulation of patent medicine prices conducted in 2020 in the Quebec Superior Court, I have no conflicts of interest to declare.
One year ago, I testified before the Standing Committee on International Trade on the issue of suspending certain provisions of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, or TRIPS, on COVID‑19 technologies. More than a year later, here I am again to discuss the same subject.
Since it was a year ago, allow me to remind you that early on in the COVID‑19 pandemic, it was impressive to see researchers from around the world working together and following open-science principles by systematically exchanging research data, whether to sequence the virus genome, monitor its evolution and its variations, or produce protective and detection equipment.
In May 2020, the World Health Organization, the WHO, established C‑TAP, which stands for the COVID‑19 Technology Access Pool, based on open science principles, to promote the exchange and transfer of technological expertise and knowledge that would help combat COVID 19.
The Medicines Patent Pool, or MPP, funded by Unitaid, also broadened its mandate to allow for the voluntary sharing of patents related to COVID 19.
At the outset, we thought we were headed towards a scientific effort based on technological collaboration and an exchange of data to ensure that every country could maximize its efforts in combatting COVID‑19. Unfortunately, the old proprietary science reflexes based on patents, trade secrets and technological monopolies quickly got the upper hand. No company has yet agreed to reveal its vaccine technologies to C‑TAP or to the MPP. Each company has been working in a silo to maximize future revenue. For example, companies that own vaccines have generally been very reluctant to negotiate licensing agreements that would help boost production.
Open science and patent sharing would be the most effective and equitable ways to optimize the production and distribution of vaccines during a pandemic. The dynamics of vaccine nationalism, which pits countries against one another to obtain vaccines from patent holders, allows these companies to maximize revenue by artificially creating a scarcity of the technologies essential to international public health. Two weeks ago, in response to a request from the Dominican Republic to use compulsory licences for Paxlovid, which is not a vaccine, but a form of treatment, Pfizer argued that intellectual property was a human right. That's total bullshit!
Don't get me wrong, patents represent one of several means to Technical difficulty, and in some circumstances, they are extremely useful. By their definition and nature, patents exist to encourage long-term innovation by slowing down the dissemination of innovations in the short term. During a pandemic or a health emergency, patents are counterproductive and become a barrier to international public health. There are other ways of speeding up the development of new technologies. By eliminating the risks inherent in private investment, measures like public grants and market guarantees have been essential incentives for the development of vaccines to combat COVID‑19.
In that kind of context, patents are superfluous and even harmful to the development of and access to new technologies. Even though governments invested hundreds of billions of dollars on the development of vaccines, we continue to consider it normal for vaccines to remain entirely in the hands of private-sector monopolies. All that a defence of patents does is increase earnings for shareholders by artificially creating scarcity. Don't forget that in 2021, Pfizer doubled its revenue because of its vaccine and tripled its profits. The company also expects to increase its revenue by 25% in 2022.
Every time there is a health emergency or a pandemic, and I'm not just talking about COVID‑19, certain provisions of the TRIPS Agreement should be suspended for relevant technologies and other means should be used to encourage innovation and technological development. In South Africa, for example, reverse engineering had to be done on the Moderna vaccine without any technical assistance from the company. It took several additional months to develop a vaccine similar to Moderna's. An mRNA vaccine to combat COVID 19 was also successfully developed even before the spread of the Omicron variant. However, because the Moderna patent holder refused to release its data, South Africa had to conduct its own clinical trials to obtain the necessary approvals. That led to a delay of several months after the Omicron variant wave before the vaccine could be distributed.
As you have already discussed exemptions from certain provisions of the TRIPS Agreement, I will skip that section.
To conclude, Canada has to stop being part of the problem. Health products for COVID‑19 should be added immediately to schedule 1 of the Patent Act. We need to immediately support an exemption to the TRIPS Agreement for all COVID‑19 treatments and vaccines, and to ensure that such a suspension could readily be triggered for any future pandemics.
And we need to start right now to encourage initiatives that would lead to sharing of open science technologies for all products to combat COVID‑19 and for any health research for which proprietary science has become a barrier to public health.
I'm counting on Canada to get on the right side of history for pandemics. Unfortunately, I have been extremely disappointed so far.
I'd be happy to answer any questions you may have.