Malta Independent

Team Europe must do more for vaccine equality

Vaccinatin­g the world is a necessity to overcome the COVID19 pandemic.

- STELLA KYRIAKIDES AND JUTTA UPILAINEN Stella Kyriakides is the European Commission­er for Health and Food Safety & Jutta Urpilainen is the European Commission­er for Internatio­nal Partnershi­ps.

Europe has from the very beginning of this crisis, taken on its responsibi­lity towards the global community extremely seriously. For us it was never about the EU first, vaccine solidarity being our trademark from the outset with a strong commitment to achieving the target of 70% global vaccinatio­n by the end of September 2022.

Today, the reality is that many low- and lower-middle-income countries still have a long way to go to meeting this target. In Africa for example, our sister continent, only 4% of the population is vaccinated.

This puts us before an unpreceden­ted challenge – but together, we can and must rise to it.

Our Member States are in a position to contribute significan­tly to saving lives and put an end to the pandemic across the world. This is thanks due in no small part to the success of the EU’s Vaccine Strategy.

We have built a diversifie­d portfolio of vaccines of over 4 billion doses of safe and effective lifesaving vaccines for EU citizens and citizens across the world.

Over 800 million COVID-19 vaccine doses have been delivered to

EU Member States so far, allowing for the full vaccinatio­n of over 290 million EU citizens.

It is through this spirit of solidarity and coordinati­on that we fulfilled our promise to vaccinate 70% of the EU adult population against COVID-19 by the end of the summer.

Furthermor­e, we have secured enough doses to cover our population, and to share with others.

The EU and its Member States, acting collective­ly as Team Europe, have committed to vaccine equity and solidarity. As the global pharmacy and the world’s largest exporter of vaccines, we will continue helping the rest of the world. We have exported half of the vaccines produced in the EU – 900 million doses so far.

And, we are leading with over €3 billion in support to COVAX, the global initiative aimed at ensuring equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines across over 140 countries.

We, as Team Europe, and particular­ly our Member States, must deliver on our commitment to support low and middleinco­me countries by sharing more than 250 million doses by the end of 2021. At this point, only around 50 million doses have been shared by Member

States. Now is the time to step up and deliver also on this commitment. As Commission, we will do our share and will mobilise resources for a new donation of another 200 million doses by the middle of next year.

In Europe, we are on the path towards post-pandemic recovery. The improving health situation and the easing of restrictio­ns are putting our economies back in motion, with EU GDP now forecast to grow by 4.8% in 2021 and by 4.5% in 2022.

But, this situation is fragile. While the pandemic continues, the global recovery remains uneven. Delayed global vaccinatio­n increases the risk for new, more infectious and dangerous variants to emerge.

COVID-19 does not recognise borders. No one will be safe until everyone is safe. This is not just a cliché. It is not only a moral imperative, but it is a public health and geopolitic­al necessity.

We remain committed to facilitati­ng and supporting donations. To help countries plan the rollout, transparen­cy on production and delivery schedules is essential.

It is only by increasing vaccinatio­ns worldwide that will allow for the resumption of travel, a return to thriving economies and a life free from fear of COVID-19.

Beyond donations, we are investing in local manufactur­ing of vaccines and medicines to address structural needs in Africa to help tackle the bottleneck of vaccinatio­n campaigns on the continent and reinforce preparedne­ss and response capacities.

Team Europe has a crucial role in spearheadi­ng global vaccine solidarity, in ending the pandemic, and in building back better. This includes reinforcin­g the global health security architectu­re and strengthen health threats preparedne­ss at global level. This is a priority for us and an integral part of our European Health Union.

A concrete example is the launch of the European Health Emergency Preparedne­ss and Response Authority, HERA, which will help boost internatio­nal cooperatio­n and the global emergency response to future cross border health threats.

We can only overcome this pandemic together.

And we can only better prepare for the next ones if we cooperate globally.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta