MPP delivered a statement at the sixth meeting of the Intergovernmental Working Group (IGWG) on the WHO Pandemic Agreement, which was conducted in hybrid format on 23–28 March 2026.

Statement delivered by Mila Maistat, Senior Manager, Policy, Strategy and Market Access:

Non-exclusive licensing and technology transfer under Article 12(8) of the PABS Annex are essential to achieving equitable objectives of the Pandemic Agreement.

Preparing for future health emergencies requires building capabilities now, so that these mechanisms deliver effectively during pandemics. This requires sustained investment in technical, regulatory, and manufacturing capacity to operationalise licensing and technology transfer.

We wish to highlight that proven and operational mechanisms are already in place to support these objectives.

The mRNA Technology Transfer Programme is a WHO/MPP-led programme,  based on a multilateral technology transfer mechanism and comprised of a network of 16 manufacturers. It is contributing to building manufacturing capacity for pandemic medical countermeasures in 15 countries across Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America.

Similarly, for non-exclusive licensing, the established MPP mechanism accelerates access to WHO-recommended products, improves affordability, and supports regional manufacturing—having facilitated the delivery of 52+ billion doses across 148 countries, preventing ~1.9 million deaths and saving $2.3 billion.

Referencing these established and proven multilateral mechanisms in Article 12(8) would not only ensure accountability to Member States but also enable timely and effective implementation, thus strengthening overall operability of the PABS Annex.

More on MPP’s work in pandemic preparedness and response