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Africa readies remedy to transform pharmaceutical industry

By , ITWeb
Africa , Rwanda , 28 Jun 2022
The Foundation will strengthen bilateral initiatives for local manufacture of pharmaceuticals, such as the recent partnership between BioNTech and Senegal’s Pasteur Institute to produce vaccines against COVID-19. Picture: Akinwumi Adesina visiting Senegal’s Institut Pasteur, January 2022.
The Foundation will strengthen bilateral initiatives for local manufacture of pharmaceuticals, such as the recent partnership between BioNTech and Senegal’s Pasteur Institute to produce vaccines against COVID-19. Picture: Akinwumi Adesina visiting Senegal’s Institut Pasteur, January 2022.

The African Development Bank’s Board of Directors has approved the establishment of the African Pharmaceutical Technology Foundation, a new institution that is expected to significantly enhance Africa’s access to the technologies that underpin the manufacture of medicines, vaccines, and other pharmaceutical products.

African Development Bank Group (AfDB) President, Dr Akinwumi Adesina said: “This is a great development for Africa. Africa must have a health defense system, which must include three major areas: revamping Africa’s pharmaceutical industry, building Africa’s vaccine manufacturing capacity, and building Africa’s quality healthcare infrastructure.”

According to a statement released to the media, during the African Union Summit in Addis Ababa in February 2022, the continent’s leaders called on the AfDB to facilitate the establishment of the African Pharmaceutical Technology Foundation.

Adesina, who presented the case for the institution to the African Union said: “Africa can no longer outsource the healthcare security of its 1.3 billion citizens to the benevolence of others.”

The stakeholders say the decision is a major boost to the health prospects of a continent that has been battered for decades by the burden of several diseases and pandemics such as COVID-19, but with very limited capacity to produce its own medicines and vaccines.

Africa imports more than 70% of all the medicines it needs, gulping US$14-billion per year.

Intellectual property rights

The AfDB says global efforts to rapidly expand the manufacturing of essential pharmaceutical products including vaccines in developing countries, particularly in Africa, to assure greater access, have been hampered by intellectual property rights protection and patents on technologies, know-how, manufacturing processes and trade secrets.

“African pharmaceutical companies do not have the scouting and negotiation capacity, and bandwidth to engage with global pharmaceutical companies.

They have been marginalised and left behind in complex global pharmaceutical innovations,” the body argues.

As an example, the organisation says recently, 35 companies signed a license with America’s Merck to produce Nirmatrelvir, a COVID-19 drug. None of them was African.

“No institution exists on the ground in Africa to support the practical implementation of Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) on non-exclusive or exclusive licensing of proprietary technologies, know-how and processes,” the AfDB claims.

It says this is where the African Pharmaceutical Technology Foundation will fill this important and glaring gap.

“When fully established, it will be staffed with world-class experts on pharmaceutical innovation and development, intellectual property rights, and health policy; acting as a transparent intermediator advancing and brokering the interests of the African pharmaceutical sector with global and other Southern pharmaceutical companies to share IP-protected technologies, know-how and patented processes,” the statement continues.

Adesina said “Even with the decision of the TRIPS Waiver at the World Trade Organisation (WTO), millions are dying -and will most likely continue to die - from lack of vaccines and effective protection. The African Pharmaceutical Technology Foundation provides a practical solution and will help to tilt the access to proprietary technologies, knowledge, know-how and processes in favour of Africa”.

WHO, WTO response

The World Trade Organisation and the World Health Organisation, respectively, welcomed the development.

The Director-General of the World Trade Organisation, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, said, “The African Pharmaceutical Technology Foundation is innovative thinking and action by the African Development Bank. It provides part of the infrastructure needed to assure an emergent pharmaceutical industry in Africa”.

The Director-General of the World Health Organisation, Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus, said “Establishing the African Pharmaceutical Technology Foundation, by the African Development Bank, is a game changer on accelerating the access of African pharmaceutical companies to IP-protected technologies and know-how in Africa”.

The African Pharmaceutical Technology Foundation will prioritize technologies, products and processes focused primarily on diseases that are widely prevalent in Africa, including current and future pandemics.

It will also build human and professional skills, the research and development ecosystem, and support upgrading of manufacturing plant capacities and regulatory quality to meet WHO standards.

While the African Pharmaceutical Technology Foundation is being established under the auspices of the African Development Bank, it will operate independently and raise funds from various stakeholders including governments, development finance institutions, philanthropic organisations among others.

The Foundation will boost the African Development Bank’s commitment to spend at least US$3-billion over the next ten years to support the pharmaceutical and vaccine manufacturing sector under its Vision 2030 Pharmaceutical Action Plan.

The Foundation’s areas of work will also be an asset to all other current investments into pharmaceutical production in Africa.

Rwanda to host

Rwanda will host the African Pharmaceutical Technology Foundation. A common benefits entity, the Foundation will have its own governance and operational structures. It will promote and broker alliances between foreign and African pharmaceutical companies.

Stakeholders add that the African Pharmaceutical Technology Foundation will strengthen local pharmaceutical companies to engage in local production initiatives with systematic technology learning and technology upgrading at the plant level.

"The Foundation will work with African governments, research and development centres of excellence to strengthen the regional pharmaceutical and vaccine innovation ecosystem for Africa and build skills of the kind needed for the pharmaceutical sector to flourish."

"It will also promote closer coordination of the various ongoing medicines and vaccines’ manufacturing initiatives at the regional level to increase collaborative linkages, leverage synergies and partnerships in a pan-African context."

The African Pharmaceutical Technology Foundation will work closely with the African Union Commission, European Union Commission, WHO, the Medicines Patent Pool, the WTO, philanthropic organisations, bilateral and multilateral agencies and institutions, and will foster collaboration between the public and private sectors in developed countries and developing countries.

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