Yes, certainly. Thanks for the question.
The industry has established in record-breaking time a network of voluntary licensing agreements with other parties. It's interesting that the IP always seems to be the focus of these issues.
The CEO of the Serum Institute, which is a huge India-based producer of vaccines—basically licensing the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine currently, but they plan to produce other vaccines as well—was asked straight out whether there's a problem of collaboration and voluntary licensing with originator entities.
He said no, that's not the problem. He said the problem is that it takes time to ramp up facilities. The scale of facilities needed to deal with COVID vastly eclipses the existing capacity in the world. There's an exponential ramp-up needed by existing vaccine makers, and they're doing it as quickly as they can. Nevertheless, it takes time and effort.
His focus, and this is on the public record.... I think it was in the The Guardian. He said the issue is his problems with the U.S. FDA and with the European Medicines Agency, in terms of rapid approval of medicines.
When we consider TRIPS and existing flexibilities, we have to ask ourselves what problem we are trying to solve. If voluntary licensing agreements and other forms of tech transfer partnerships between innovative companies and entities such as the Serum Institute are working—granted, everyone would like them to work faster than they do now, and everybody would like more production—we have to ask ourselves, is a TRIPS waiver going to contribute to this?
The answer from the innovative industry would be no. If anything, it would be disruptive to existing arrangements, which, while everyone would like these things to move faster, are actually yielding real world benefits in terms of vaccine production.
I hope I have addressed your question.