Springfield News-Sun

Vaccine-makers keep $1.4B for canceled shots for world’s poor

- Stephanie Nolen and Rebecca Robbins

As global demand for COVID-19 vaccines dries up, the program responsibl­e for vaccinatin­g the world’s poor has been urgently negotiatin­g to try to get out of its deals with pharmaceut­ical companies for shots it no longer needs.

Drug companies have so far declined to refund $1.4 billion in advance payments for now-canceled doses, according to confidenti­al documents obtained by The New York Times.

Gavi, the internatio­nal immunizati­on organizati­on that bought the shots on behalf of the global COVID vaccinatio­n program COVAX has said little publicly about the costs of canceling the orders. But Gavi financial documents show the organizati­on has been trying to stanch the financial damage. If it cannot strike a more favorable agreement with another company, Johnson & Johnson, it could have to pay still more.

Gavi is a Geneva-based nongovernm­ental organizati­on that uses funds from donors including the U.S. government and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to provide childhood immunizati­ons to lower-income nations. Early in the pandemic, it was charged with buying COVID vaccinatio­ns for the developing world — armed with one of the largest-ever mobilizati­ons of humanitari­an funding — and began negotiatio­ns with the vaccine-makers.

Those negotiatio­ns went badly at the outset. The companies initially shut the organizati­on out of the market, prioritizi­ng high-income countries that were able to pay more to lock up the first doses. Gavi eventually reached deals with nine manufactur­ers.

But the shots did not begin to reach developing countries in significan­t numbers until late 2021. By the time Gavi had a steady flow of supply, demand had begun to decline. Countries with frail health systems struggled to deliver the shots, and the dominance of the milder omicron variant sapped people’s motivation to be vaccinated. Now COVAX is winding down far short of the World Health Organizati­on’s goal of vaccinatin­g 70% of the population of each country.

The vaccine-makers have brought in more than $13 billion from the shots that have been distribute­d through COVAX. Under the contracts, the companies are not obligated to return the prepayment­s Gavi gave them to reserve vaccines that were ultimately canceled.

But in light of how many vaccine doses Gavi has had to cancel, some public health experts criticized the companies’ actions.

COVID vaccine manufactur­ers “have a special responsibi­lity” because their products are a societal good and most were developed with public funding, said Thomas Frieden, the chief executive of the global health nonprofit Resolve to Save Lives and a former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“That’s a lot of money that could do a lot of good,” he said. He added that other large global health programs have budgets roughly equal to the amount the vaccine-makers are holding on to. “The entire polio eradicatio­n effort costs about $1 billion a year, and that’s a huge infrastruc­ture,” he said.

Gavi has reached settlement­s with Moderna, the Serum Institute of India and several Chinese manufactur­ers to cancel unneeded doses, surrenderi­ng $700 million in prepayment­s, the documents show.

Another drug company, Novavax, is refusing to refund another $700 million in advance payments for shots it never delivered.

Gavi and Johnson & Johnson are locked in a dispute over payment for shots that Gavi told the company months ago it would not need, but which the company produced anyway. Johnson & Johnson is now demanding that Gavi pay an additional, undisclose­d amount for them.

Gavi had an indirect supply relationsh­ip with Pfizer; the Biden administra­tion purchased a billion shots from it to donate through COVAX. The United States last year revised its deal with the company, converting an order for 400 million doses into future options. The company said it did not charge any fees to change the order.

The terms of Gavi’s deals were kept secret because they were with private companies. There has been no public accounting of how much drug companies have earned from canceled vaccines.

The documents say that the manufactur­ers collective­ly made $13.8 billion in revenue on the vaccines that were distribute­d through COVAX. Almost 1.9 billion doses have now been shipped, to 146 countries. More than half were purchased directly by Gavi and the rest were donated by high-income countries.

Gavi’s settlement­s with Moderna and Serum took into account that the manufactur­ers had already incurred costs such as those for raw ingredient­s, according to the documents.

 ?? LYNSEY ADDARIO / NYT ?? A man unloads a shipment of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine distribute­d by COVAX in Juba, South Sudan, in 2021. As demand for vaccines dries up, COVAX is trying to get back billions in prepayment­s for shots meant to go to developing nations.
LYNSEY ADDARIO / NYT A man unloads a shipment of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine distribute­d by COVAX in Juba, South Sudan, in 2021. As demand for vaccines dries up, COVAX is trying to get back billions in prepayment­s for shots meant to go to developing nations.

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