Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Covax initiative falls short on its ’21 doses pledge

Group drops donation goal to 800 million inoculatio­ns

- ADAM TAYLOR

Covax, an expansive vaccine-sharing initiative to get doses to low- and middle-income nations, once pledged to deliver more than 2 billion shots worldwide by the end of the year. But as the days tick down, it is scrambling to deliver well under half that figure.

The United Nations-led initiative is now racing to deliver 800 million doses by the end of the year, according to interviews with senior officials involved in Covax, which includes the World Health Organizati­on and other groups. Even if that benchmark is met, it will be a far cry from the 2.3 billion doses hoped for in January by a program designed to counter a glut of vaccines in wealthy nations.

Covax lowered its estimate of doses delivered in 2021 to between 800 million and 1 billion doses late this year after a range of complicati­ons with supply and delivery. Omicron, a variant first detected in southern Africa, has added urgency to the need for vaccines, but also disrupted shipping and could upend Covax’s hopes for more regular shipments in 2022.

Though the organizati­on was set up to pool money to purchase its own doses from a variety of manufactur­ers, many of those orders were delayed in the first part of the year. Covax increasing­ly relies upon donations from the United States and other wealthy countries of vaccines including the AstraZenec­a-Oxford, Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson shots.

The Biden administra­tion pledged in September to donate or facilitate the purchase of 1.1 billion doses to Covax, though many of those doses are not expected to arrive until next year.

Officials with the organizati­ons backing Covax said this week that they cannot say for certain how many doses will have been delivered by Jan. 1.

“That number is probably going to be over 800 million by the end of the year,” said Richard Hatchett, chief executive of the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s, one of the key organizati­ons backing Covax along with the vaccine alliance Gavi and the WHO.

WHO vaccine director Kate O’Brien said the U.N. agency was expecting to meet the 800 million threshold soon, but added that there was some “wiggle room there” and the final date could fall into early 2022.

“The opera isn’t over till the fat lady sings, right? So we won’t know until we know, but we are working intensivel­y, literally around-theclock to try, to get as many shipments out as possible,” O’Brien said.

Covax officials downplayed the significan­ce of the final 2021 number. But some critics of the organizati­on said it was further proof that Covax had failed to live up to the expectatio­ns it set in the early months of the pandemic.

“Covax is not on track to meeting its modest targets, let alone vaccinatin­g the world,” said Zain Rizvi, a researcher with the consumer rights advocacy group Public Citizen. “This failure reflects the yawning gap between the rhetoric and reality of global vaccine access.”

Even meeting the 800 million-doses threshold will be a push, though deliveries through Covax have been increasing.

By the end of November, Covax had delivered 596 million doses around the world, according to a dashboard of vaccine deliveries maintained by UNICEF. To get out 800 million doses this year, Covax would need to deliver more than 200 million doses this month — more than any monthly total so far.

Officials say, however, that the rate of deliveries could increase before the end of the month. The monthly rate of deliveries has increased steadily since September, with a Covax record of more than 150 million doses delivered in November, according to UNICEF data.

“In the last few days, I think we’ve moved like 11 million doses a day on a couple of occasions,” Hatchett said.

Covax has struggled with supply issues since its founding. The initiative had sought to pool resources to buy a portfolio of doses, ensuring that all countries had access to vaccines for their most vulnerable population­s. Almost 200 countries signed up to be a part of Covax, with the organizati­on raising billions of dollars in funding.

While many wealthy nations supported Covax, they also placed advance orders with vaccine manufactur­ers before Covax could raise enough money to do so. That pushed the initiative to the back of the queue.

Later, supplies were further strained when one of the initiative’s major suppliers of vaccine, the Serum Institute of India, was blocked from exporting after a wave of cases linked to the delta variant hit the country.

Low-income nations have administer­ed just over 60 million doses so far, according to Our World in Data, a fraction of the 326 million booster shots that have been delivered in mostly high-income nations.

Some of Covax’s supply issues have been alleviated, largely because of donated doses from wealthy nations and the resumption of Indian exports in November. But significan­t challenges remain with transporti­ng and administer­ing the vaccines in some nations, officials say.

Donated doses often come with additional complicati­ons, including shorter shelf lives before expiration.

Critics say the initiative has not been transparen­t enough about its supply issues. Covax repeatedly “downgraded their targets, and then missed those targets, and then downgraded those targets again,” said James Krellenste­in, co-founder of the health-equity organizati­on PrEP4All.

The 2 billion figure has hung over Covax since before it was started. In a March 25, 2020, white paper that called for a new “globally fair allocation system for Covid-19 vaccines” — a proposal that would help shape Covax, which formed the following month — Hatchett called for a system to “provide a minimum of 1-2 billion doses of vaccine per year for a minimum of three years.”

A supply forecast released in January said that “almost 2.3 billion doses” could be “rolled out worldwide” through Covax in 2021.

In a statement in May, Covax said the initiative’s original objective to deliver “2 billion doses of vaccines worldwide in 2021 was “still well within reach.” That soon changed.

A supply forecast released Sept. 8 said the initiative expected to have 1.425 billion doses in available supply, cumulative­ly, by the end of the year. It did not specify how many of those doses would have been delivered to recipient countries.

The number of doses expected to be delivered by Covax appeared to decline again in November, when an internal meeting report released Nov. 22 said Covax had set a target to “to ship between [800 million] and 1 billion doses in total by year end.”

The immediate issue is no longer supply, but logistics is. Roughly 1.2 billion vaccine doses have now been released for Covax, O’Brien said, but not all countries were ready for them.

“We’re in this hybrid space where we’re very much in the shift between supply-constraine­d to more demand-driven uptake,” O’Brien said.

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