Shanghai Daily

Sinovac and Sinopharm agree to supply over 100m doses to Covax

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TWO Chinese vaccine makers, Sinovac and Sinopharm, have agreed to immediatel­y begin making more than 100 million COVID-19 vaccine doses available to the Covax distributi­on facility.

“The agreements, which come at a time when the Delta variant is posing a rising risk to health systems, will begin to make 110 million doses immediatel­y available to participan­ts of the Covax facility, with options for additional doses,” said the vaccine alliance Gavi, which is one of the facility’s main backers.

Gavi chief Seth Berkley hailed the agreements ushering two more vaccines into the Covax portfolio, which now has 11 vaccines and vaccine candidates at its disposal, including those made by AstraZenec­a, Johnson & Johnson, Moderna and Pfizer.

“Thanks to this deal, and because these vaccines have already received WHO Emergency Use Listing, we can move to start supplying doses to countries immediatel­y,” he said in a statement.

Covax, which is also backed by the World Health Organizati­on and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s, was set up to ensure equitable distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines, particular­ly to lowincome countries. But it has struggled to get hold of enough donation-funded doses for poorer nations.

As of yesterday, Covax had distribute­d over 102 million doses to 135 countries — far fewer than the goal stated at the start of the year.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s has slammed “vaccine nationalis­m” in which a handful of countries have hoarded the jabs, leading to “shocking inequity” in global access to them.

While 70 percent of the population is vaccinated in some developed countries, the figure is less than 1 percent for lowincome countries, according to the UN.

The agreements announced yesterday enable Covax to snap up 60 million Sinopharm vaccine doses through the end of October and 50 million Sinovac doses through the end of September.

In total, some 170 million Sinopharm doses and a total of 380 million Sinovac doses could potentiall­y be made available by mid-2022, the statement said.

The vaccine doses will be made available to both poorer countries, who receive donation-funded doses, and paying Covax participan­ts. Gavi said that Covax now expects to be able to distribute 2 billion doses by early 2022, including 1.8 billion to the 92 poorest countries relying on the facility for their COVID-19 vaccines.

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