Monday 18 May

Item 13.3 – Open-ended Intergovernmental Working Group on the WHO Pandemic Agreement

STATEMENT

Delivered by Hillary Mutungi

We commend negotiators for their continued efforts to build consensus around the PABS Annex.  We also note the focus on  non-exclusive licensing and technology transfer as important elements to achieving the equity objectives of the Pandemic Agreement. 

As you know, these mechanisms have already been widely applied in practice to support equitable access to many other health products. 

In this regard, we are pleased to announce that MPP and Roche have signed a new voluntary licence agreement on baloxavir marboxil, a WHO-recommended antiviral for influenza. This agreement demonstrates three important things. 

First, that proven global access mechanisms not only exist, but continue delivering for public health. The licence agreement will enable generic manufacturers to supply quality-assured baloxavir across 129 countries while supporting geographically diversified manufacturing and regional production capacity. 

Second, the licence includes provisions to facilitate access during a public health emergency, including collaboration to address manufacturing and supply barriers. This is particularly important in the context of pandemic preparedness and response. 

Third, the agreement illustrates how public health-oriented licensing and sharing of know-how can support both immediate access objectives and longer-term preparedness goals. By supporting local and regional manufacturers, the MPP mechanism contributes to building sustainable capacity before emergencies occur. 

This licence agreement provides a valuable example for operationalizing the Pandemic Agreement and highlights the importance of leveraging proven mechanisms such as MPP licensing and the WHO-MPP mRNA Technology Transfer Programme to deliver timely, effective, and equitable outcomes for Member States. 

Wednesday 21 May

Item 11 — Recommitting to accelerate progress towards malaria elimination (Document A79/4)

STATEMENT

Delivered by Marie Levy

The Medicines Patent Pool welcomes the call to accelerate progress towards malaria elimination.

Reaching the 2030 targets of the Global Technical Strategy requires continued investment in tools that work today, as well as timely and affordable access to next generation anti-malarial medicines.

Public health–oriented voluntary licensing is a proven mechanism to deliver access to new medicines; it shortens the time between innovation and availability, lowers prices, and strengthens supply security.

MPP stands ready to apply our model in the field of malaria as new antimalarials advance through the pipeline. This includes working towards the availability of adapted child-friendly formulations of key malaria medicines, in line with the outcomes of the PADO process for malaria convened by the WHO’s Global Accelerator for Paediatric Formulations.