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UNESCO calls for shared science

China Daily | Updated: 2021-05-13 09:38

PARIS-Experts at UNESCO are quietly working on an ambitious plan to set up a new global system for sharing scientific knowledge that would outlast the current pandemic.

Diplomats and legal and technical experts from UNESCO'S member states tried to draw up global guidelines under a project called Open Science at a meeting that concluded on Tuesday.

UNESCO's specialists say the pandemic has shown that sharing sensitive research is possible. Chinese scientists sequenced and shared the genome of the then-new coronavirus in January 2020, allowing German researchers to quickly devise a screening test shared around the world.

"The crisis put a spotlight on how scientific information is produced, shared, communicated," said Ana Persic, chief of the science policy section at Paris-based UNESCO. "It is a paradigm shift for the scientific community."

The Open Science talks aim to come up with a "soft law" by the end of this year that governments could use as a guide for setting science policies and systematically sharing data, software and research across borders, Persic said.

Suspending vaccine patents is more sensitive than genomes or testing protocols because of the huge investment and commercial concerns involved, Persic said. Discussions on the patent issue are centered at the World Trade Organization, not UNESCO, and are far from reaching consensus.

Immediate action sought

European leaders say lifting patent protections won't solve the problem of getting shots into the arms of people in poorer countries. Instead, they are pushing for more immediate action, like urging the US to export vaccine doses that have already been produced.

But Persic said that "in times of emergency or crisis, there might be a way of lifting those patents. … One can protect the data in a certain way, and still share it."

US President Joe Biden's surprise announcement last week in favor of suspending patent protections came just at experts started meeting at UNESCO to discuss the Open Science plan. Biden's move "was received as a positive nod" to their efforts, Persic said.

In 2019, then-US president Donald Trump pulled out of UNESCO, but US diplomats are taking part in the Open Science talks as observers.

UNESCO Director General Audrey Azoulay said in a statement that lifting patent protection for coronavirus vaccines "could save millions of lives and serve as a blueprint for the future of scientific cooperation".

Agencies via Xinhua

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