
QUT Professor Endorses UK Push To Create Smokefree Generations
QUT Media4th November 2025 The United Kingdom Parliament is considering a bill aimed at making smoking obsolete, which has been
Author: Peter Yu
Abstract: In October 2020, India and South Africa submitted an unprecedented proposal to the WTO, calling for the partial suspension of the TRIPS Agreement to facilitate the “prevention, containment or treatment of COVID-19.” Although this proposal immediately received considerable support from other WTO members, civil society organizations and individual experts, it faced strong opposition from some developed countries—most notably the European Union, the United Kingdom, Switzerland and, to some extent, also the United States.
By December 2021, it was quite clear that the COVID-19 TRIPS waiver proposal would not receive enough support to achieve consensus within the WTO membership. Around that time, the European Union, India, South Africa and the United States, with the support of the WTO, launched quadrilateral consultations to find a compromise solution. The “Quad proposal” that was eventually developed through these high-level consultations became the blueprint from which WTO members developed a new ministerial decision at the Twelfth WTO Ministerial Conference in Geneva in June 2022. This decision allowed WTO members to manufacture COVID-19 vaccines—and, if subsequently approved, also other COVID-19 health products—without the authorization of the relevant patent holders.
This chapter traces the TRIPS waiver debate from the submission of the original proposal by India and South Africa in October 2020 to the final adoption of the Ministerial Decision on the TRIPS Agreement in June 2022. The chapter further evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of this newly adopted decision, comparing it with the earlier TRIPS waiver proposal. It concludes by offering suggestions for future actions that WTO members on both sides of the waiver debate could take to help combat the COVID-19 pandemic.
Citation: Yu, Peter K., The COVID-19 TRIPS Waiver and the WTO Ministerial Decision (June 30, 2022). IPR IN TIMES OF CRISIS: LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC, Jens Schovsbo, ed., Edward Elgar Publishing, 2023, Forthcoming, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4150090 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4150090

QUT Media4th November 2025 The United Kingdom Parliament is considering a bill aimed at making smoking obsolete, which has been
Speaking at the Global Expert Network on Copyright User Rights Symposium on 16 June 2025, Professor Christophe Geiger argues for
On 25 September 2025, Professor Wend Wendland, delivered the 14th Peter Jaszi Distinguished Lecture at American University in Washington D.C..
On September 18, 2025, the Italian Senate definitively approved the country’s first comprehensive framework law on artificial intelligence (AI). The
Por Andrés Izquierdo Durante la segunda semana de agosto, fui invitado a hablar en la Feria Internacional del Libro de
By Andrés Izquierdo AI, Copyright, and the Future of Creativity: Notes from the Panama International Book FairDuring the second week
