Khaleej Times

$2b raised to buy virus shots for poor nations

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london — A facility set up by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) and the GAVI vaccine group has exceeded an interim target of raising more than $2 billion to buy and distribute Covid-19 shots for poorer countries, but said it still needs more.

The GAVI alliance said on Friday that the funds for an advance market commitment (AMC) will allow the COVAx facility to buy an initial one billion vaccine doses for 92 eligible countries which would not otherwise be able to afford them.

“We’ve seen sovereign and private donors from across the world dig deep and meet this target and help ensure that every country will get access to Covid vaccines, not just the wealthy few,” GAVI chief Seth Berkley told reporters, adding that there was an “urgent need” to also finance treatments and diagnostic­s.

The European Commission, France, Spain, South Korea, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and others had in recent weeks pledged another $360 million to the AMC, the alliance said, bringing total funding over the $2 billion target for this year.

Another $5 billion will be needed in 2021 to procure Covid-19 vaccine doses as they come through developmen­t and are approved by regulators, GAVI said in a statement.

Berkley also welcomed the US presidenti­al election outcome, adding he expected to have talks with president-elect Joe Biden’s team about the COVAx plan.

“It’s positive that the incoming administra­tion has already establishe­d a Covid-19 task force filled with many scientists we know are believers in science and moving this forward,” he said.

“The US is already one of GAVI’s biggest supporters, they care enormously about vaccines for the developing world. And I suspect that we will have continuing conversati­ons about how we can collaborat­e with them,” he added.

US drugmaker Pfizer and its partner BioNTech , who this week said their experiment­al Covid-19 vaccine was 90 per cent effective in initial trials, had expressed an interest in supplying doses to the COVAx facility, Berkley said.

“We continue to advance negotiatio­ns with a number of manufactur­ers in addition to those we’ve already announced who share our vision of fair and equitable distributi­on of vaccines,” he added. Berkley said $3 billion was also still needed for diagnostic­s and $6.1 billion for therapeuti­cs by the end of 2021.

Vaccine developers Pfizer and BioNTech plan to roll out the first doses within weeks, once they receive emergency use permission­s from drug agencies. They expect to have 1.3 billion doses ready next year. At the cost of $40 per treatment, which consists of two separate shots, richer nations have rushed to order tens of millions of doses. But it is less clear what poorer nations can expect.

“If we only have the Pfizer vaccine and everyone needs two doses, clearly that’s a difficult ethical dilemma,” Trudie Lang, director of The Global Health Network at the University of Oxford’s Nuffield Department of Medicine, said.—

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 ?? Reuters ?? UP In aRMS: People covered in foam take part in a demonstrat­ion to protest against the Belgian authoritie­s’ management of the covid-19 crisis, in Brussels, Belgium, on Friday. —
Reuters UP In aRMS: People covered in foam take part in a demonstrat­ion to protest against the Belgian authoritie­s’ management of the covid-19 crisis, in Brussels, Belgium, on Friday. —

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