The Borneo Post

EU inks deal for extra 1.8b BioNTech/Pfizer doses

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PORTO, Portugal: The EU has concluded a deal with BioNTech/Pfizer for up to 1.8 billion extra doses of their Covid-19 vaccine, European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said on Saturday.

“Happy to announce that the EU Commission has just approved a contract for guaranteed 900 million doses (+900 million options) with BioNTech/Pfizer for 20212023,” she tweeted from an EU summit in Portugal.

“Other contracts and other vaccine technologi­es will follow,” she promised.

The contract, on top of the 600 million BioNTech/Pfizer doses the commission has already secured, aims to supply the bloc — population 450 million — with enough jabs for booster shots, the EU said.

They could also expand vaccinatio­n to minors and for exports to lower-income countries outside the EU, it added.

Von der Leyen has said that the mRNA technology used by BioNTech/Pfizer and other vaccine-makers has proven safe and effective.

BioNTech of Germany and Pfizer of the United States have stepped up supply Europe with their jointly produced doses, and their vaccine is currently the main one being used in the EU.

Others in the EU vaccine portfolio include those from AstraZenec­a — which delivered far below the quantities it had promised, and whose jab has been tarnished by a link to very rare blood clots — as well as from Moderna and Johnson & Johnson.

After a slow start, the EU’s vaccinatio­n rollout has greatly picked up speed, with more than a quarter of its population having received at least one jab.

The 27-nation bloc is on track to have 70 percent of adults fully vaccinated by late July, and is already cautiously reopening ahead of its vital summer vacation period.

Von der Leyen has stood by the EU strategy of her Commission being responsibl­e for negotiatin­g vaccine contracts for all member countries, despite early criticism that rollout was too slow.

Europe is now debating with the United States over whether lifting patents on Covid vaccines could boost supplies to poorer countries.

The EU has so far sent more than 200 million doses to nonEU countries, while the United States has dispatched just 2.7 million to Mexico in what it describes as a “loan”.

The head of the World Health Organisati­on, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, tweeted that “Europe’s role in the world is more critical today than ever as we fight Covid-19,” adding that it “shows when we collaborat­e on common causes we are stronger together”.

The European Union is major contributo­r to Covax, a WHObacked facility designed to get doses to mainly lower-income countries. — AFP

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? Photo show a vial containing the Covid-N9 vaccine by Pfizer-BiokTech and a syringe are seen on a table in the pharmacy of the vaccinatio­n center at the Robert Bosch hospital in Stuttgart, southern dermany.
— AFP file photo Photo show a vial containing the Covid-N9 vaccine by Pfizer-BiokTech and a syringe are seen on a table in the pharmacy of the vaccinatio­n center at the Robert Bosch hospital in Stuttgart, southern dermany.

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