Los Angeles Times

U.S. TO GET 500 MILLION VACCINES TO POOR

Pfizer’s COVID doses will be donated to impoverish­ed nations under Biden’s effort.

- By Chris Megerian, Emily Baumgaertn­er and Eli Stokols

CORNWALL, England — The United States will buy 500 million doses of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine to donate to impoverish­ed nations, signaling a massive new investment in the worldwide inoculatio­n campaign, according to a person familiar with the initiative.

President Biden will announce the plan Thursday before attending the annual summit of the Group of 7, made up of the leaders of seven of the world’s largest democracie­s, in Cornwall, England. The Pfizer doses will be provided to COVAX, an internatio­nal partnershi­p for distributi­ng vaccines to low-income countries.

The donation represents a cornerston­e of the U.S. effort to bring the global pandemic to an end, as well as to counter the influence of authoritar­ian countries like Russia and China, which were quicker to provide vaccines overseas. Biden focused first on providing enough vaccines to Americans, drawing criticism from humanitari­an organizati­ons who said the world’s richest nation shouldn’t be sitting on the sidelines.

Ramping up internatio­nal vaccine distributi­on will not only save lives by curtailing COVID-19 outbreaks but also stem the emergence of new, potentiall­y more dangerous variants that could spread more quickly from country to country, lengthenin­g a pandemic that has already killed more than 3.75 million people.

Speaking to U.S. military personnel after landing in England, Biden said he would use the summit to urge allied nations to play a larger role in addressing the coronaviru­s and other problems like climate change. He’s also scheduled to attend meetings with the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on and the European Commission in Brussels. He’ll then travel to Geneva to sit down with President Vladimir Putin of Russia, which is not part of the G-7.

“The United States is

back and the democracie­s of the world are standing together to tackle the toughest challenges,” he said.

The U.S. will provide 200 million Pfizer doses this year and 300 million in the first half of next year, according to the person familiar with the plan. The person requested anonymity to provide details before Biden’s official announceme­nt, which comes after weeks of behind-the-scenes work by administra­tion officials.

The vaccines will be provided through COVAX to 92 countries and the African Union, which comprises 55 nations. The Pfizer vaccine requires two doses to be fully effective, so the donations would be enough to vaccinate 250 million people. By comparison, 140 million Americans have been fully vaccinated.

The news comes at a critical time in the global crisis. Of utmost concern is the Delta variant, also known as B.1.617.2, which first emerged in India and is believed to be partially responsibl­e for the country’s recent explosive spread. The variant, suspected to be 40% to 50% more transmissi­ble than the Alpha variant, or B.1.1.7, which emerged in the U.K., has now been detected in some 60 countries.

The Delta variant is also quickly becoming the dominant one in countries including the Democratic Republic of Congo, according to John Nkengasong, director of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Fewer than 0.1% of people in Congo have gotten a vaccine.

Many African nations do not have the biotech capacity to identify and track the movement of different variants within their borders. And their vaccine inventory contracted when India, a major global supplier, halted exports of the shots to address its domestic crisis. Countries such as Burkina Faso and South Sudan, for example, also report vaccinatio­n rates below 0.1%.

Slow vaccinatio­n campaigns are of major concern, because experts can’t predict what kind of advanced variants will exist by the time the rollouts reach a critical mass. Every new coronaviru­s infection is a chance for mutations to arise, potentiall­y ushering in a dangerous new version of the virus that could evade existing defenses. When such variants arise and move quickly, even fully vaccinated countries could become at risk.

That’s why public health officials continue to argue for defensive tactics, such as masking and social distancing, until each region’s case numbers are negligibly low. The long-lasting solution, however, is vaccinatio­n. The World Health Organizati­on estimates that 11 billion doses are needed to inoculate the planet.

“We won’t end this global pandemic anywhere unless we beat it everywhere,” Tom Hart, acting chief executive at the ONE Campaign, an internatio­nal anti-poverty organizati­on, said in a statement. “Donating doses to COVAX will save lives, reduce the spread of variants, and help reopen the global economy.”

Activists will continue to push for even stronger action from the U.S. and other rich nations. Niko Lusiani, a senior advisor with Oxfam America, said intellectu­al property rules must be lifted and technology must be shared to boost vaccine production around the world.

“It’s encouragin­g to see that in its quest to get America vaccinated, the Biden administra­tion has not lost sight of the needs of those outside our borders,” Lusiani said in a statement. “However, charity is not going win the war against the coronaviru­s.”

The Biden administra­tion already announced that it would support a waiver for intellectu­al property protection­s, but the European Union has balked at the idea.

Before Thursday’s announceme­nt, the U.S. had committed 80 million vaccines to the global effort by the end of June. It’s also providing $2 billion in funding to COVAX, with another $2 billion spread out over the next two years.

Many countries have struggled to get access to vaccines as rich nations bought up doses to inoculate their own population­s. Numbers from Our World in Data, a project based at the University of Oxford, show a stark gap in worldwide distributi­on.

Although Brazil and India have suffered devastatin­g outbreaks, they’ve struggled to vaccinate people as quickly as other nations. Only 24% of Brazilians and less than 14% of Indians have received at least one dose.

And though the numbers of new cases and deaths are decreasing globally, there are major discrepanc­ies across regions. Almost every country in South America, for example, ranks among those with the most cases and deaths worldwide.

Vaccinatio­n coverage on the continent varies. Uruguay was among the worst hit, but almost a third of the population has been fully vaccinated. Peru has the world’s highest per capita death toll — about 1 in every 175 people have died — but less than 5% of the country is fully vaccinated.

Carlos del Rio, an infectious-disease expert at Emory University School of Medicine, said it’s “way, way too early” to say whether higher vaccinatio­n rates will consistent­ly lead to lower death rates across the world.

Still, he said, places like Israel, which rapidly vaccinated large swaths of its population and drove down infections, showed how lifesaving the measure can be. The Biden administra­tion’s forthcomin­g announceme­nt could help other countries catch up.

“Global pandemics will be solved by a global solution,” Dr. Anthony Fauci told MSNBC on Wednesday. “You cannot live in a vacuum in this world. We’re an interconne­cted world, particular­ly when you’re dealing with a highly transmissi­ble respirator­y virus.”

Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, added, “There are many countries in the world in which the level of vaccine is so low, through no fault of their own. They don’t have the resources. They don’t have the capability.”

 ?? Jorge Saenz Associated Press ?? IN LIMPIO, Paraguay, relatives mourn last week for a COVID-19 victim. Almost every country in South America ranks among those with the highest death rates.
Jorge Saenz Associated Press IN LIMPIO, Paraguay, relatives mourn last week for a COVID-19 victim. Almost every country in South America ranks among those with the highest death rates.

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