WHO member states concluded the resumed 6th session of the IGWG (Intergovernmental Working Group on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response) on 1 May by agreeing to extend negotiations on the PABS (Pathogen Access and Benefit-Sharing) annex to the Pandemic Agreement. 1 The Agreement was adopted at WHA78 in May 2025. One year on, it cannot be signed or ratified because the PABS annex, described by WHO as 'the last piece of the puzzle', remains unresolved. The 7th IGWG session is scheduled for 6-17 July 2026. WHA79, convening in Geneva 18-23 May, is expected to formally authorise continued negotiations through mid-2027, meaning the Agreement could remain inoperative for at least two full years post-adoption.
The structural tension behind PABS has resisted resolution since the treaty's initial draft: high-income countries want rapid, frictionless access to pathogen samples for vaccine development; low- and middle-income countries want guaranteed access to the resulting vaccines. The same tension disabled the Nagoya Protocol's application to pathogens under the Convention on Biological Diversity. No countries or blocs have publicly named themselves as the obstacle to consensus; WHO's characterisation that 'differences will be overcome' gives no indication of whether the gap is technical (sample-sharing definitions) or political (vaccine-access guarantees). NTI Bio and Resolve to Save Lives (founded by former CDC director Tom Frieden) have consistently argued PABS is the treaty's load-bearing arch.
The governance stasis lands in a week when the US dairy H5N1 picture is deteriorating and Andes hantavirus is tracking across six countries. The WHO R&D Blueprint Q1 2026 roadmaps represent the parallel preparedness track that is moving: published pathogen roadmaps for filoviruses, arenaviruses, and paramyxoviruses in the first quarter. The 7th IGWG session opens only in July 2026, with no interim deliverables agreed. The R&D Blueprint covers pathogen research prioritisation; it cannot substitute for the vaccine-sharing mechanism that PABS was designed to provide in a declared emergency.
