Seth Berkley, chief executive of the GAVI vaccines alliance, said
the coordinated plan, known as COVAX, now has Japan, Germany, Norway
and more than 70 other nations signed up, agreeing in principle to
procure COVID-19 vaccines through the facility for their
populations.
"We have, as of right now, 76 upper middle income and high income
countries that have submitted confirmations of intent to participate
- and we expect that number to go up," Berkley told Reuters in an
interview.
"This is good news. It shows that the COVAX facility is open for
business and is attracting the type of interest across the world we
had hoped it would," he said.
COVAX coordinators are in talks with China about whether it might
also join, Berkley said.
"We had a discussion yesterday with the (Chinese) government,"
Berkley said. "We don't have any signed agreement with them yet,"
but Beijing has given "a positive signal," he added.
COVAX is co-led by GAVI, the WHO and the Coalition for Epidemic
Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), and is designed to discourage
national governments from hoarding COVID-19 vaccines and to focus on
first vaccinating the most high-risk people in every country.
Its backers say this strategy should lead to lower vaccine costs for
everyone and a swifter end to the pandemic that has claimed some
860,000 lives globally.
Wealthy countries that join COVAX will finance the vaccine purchases
from their national budgets, and will partner with 92 poorer nations
supported through voluntary donations to the plan to ensure vaccines
are delivered equitably, Berkley said.
Participating wealthy countries are also free to procure vaccines
through bilateral deals and other plans.
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The United States said on Tuesday it would not join COVAX due to the
Trump administration's objection to WHO involvement, a move
described by some critics as "disappointing". Berkley said he was
not surprised by the U.S. decision, but would seek to continue talks
with Washington.
In what appeared to be a change of position on Wednesday, the
European Union said its member states could buy potential COVID-19
vaccines through COVAX.
COVAX coordinators sought to add flexibility to joining agreements
to encourage greater participation, Berkley said.
The WHO describes COVAX as an "invaluable insurance policy" for all
countries to secure access to safe and effective COVID-19 vaccines
when they are developed and approved. The plan's coordinators have
set a deadline of September 18 for countries signing up to make
binding commitments.
COVAX's aim is to procure and deliver 2 billion doses of approved
vaccines by the end of 2021. It currently has nine COVID-19 vaccine
candidates in its portfolio employing a range of different
technologies and scientific approaches.
A handful are already in late-stage clinical trials and could have
data available by year end.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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