Coronavirus vaccine producers promised billions of doses for
poorer countries at a G20 health summit Friday, where leaders vowed to expand
access to jabs is the only way to end the pandemic.
Meanwhile, the European Union pledged to donate 100 million
doses and invest in regional manufacturing hubs in Africa to reduce the
continent´s reliance on imports.
World Health Organisation (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus hailed the "generous announcements", but warned, "in
the coming months, we will need hundreds of millions more doses."
In their summit declaration, the Group of 20 most powerful
countries emphasized the importance of open supply chains and equitable access
to tools to tackle COVID-19.
"It is a very clear 'no' to health nationalism,"
said European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, who co-hosted the summit
with Prime Minister Mario Draghi of Italy, the current G20 chair.
But the five-page text, containing a list of 16 principles,
stopped short of endorsing the contentious idea of a temporary global waiver on
patent protection for coronavirus vaccines to boost global production.
Instead, it called for other tools such as "data
sharing, capacity building, licensing agreements, and voluntary technology and
know-how transfers on mutually agreed terms."
Vaccinate the world
The summit was billed as an attempt to learn lessons from
the pandemic, which has killed more than 3.4 million people globally since the
COVID-19 virus emerged in late 2019.
The final declaration emphasized the need for investment in
global healthcare systems, improved data sharing, and surveillance of human and
animal diseases.
But while many rich countries are enjoying a slowdown in
infections thanks to vaccination drives, many others are still battling fresh
surges — and the pressing need to help them dominated the day's discussions.
"As we prepare for the next pandemic, our priority must
be to ensure that we all overcome the current one together," Draghi told
the summit.
"We must vaccinate the world — and do it fast."
In Washington, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) report
emphasized the same message, with a $50-billion (41-billion euro) plan to end
the pandemic focused heavily on expanding the rollout of vaccines.
It noted that as of last month, less than two percent of
people in Africa had been vaccinated while more than 40% of the population in
the United States and more than 20% in Europe had received at least one dose.
'Share dollars and doses'
In an announcement at the summit, Pfizer promised two
billion vaccine doses and Moderna "up to" 995 million by the end of
2022 at cost or discount to poorer nations.
Johnson & Johnson unveiled a deal with the Covax
vaccine-sharing program for 200 million doses this year, and said it was
discussing the "potential supply" of an additional 300 million for
2022.
Much of this will be provided through the vaccine-sharing
program Covax, to which Germany and France also pledged 30 million doses by
the end of this year.
A Covax spokesman told AFP it had secured enough doses
through existing and ongoing deals to vaccinate up to 30% of the populations in
92 low- and medium-income countries — about 1.8 billion doses.
But further support is needed.
The WHO's Access to Covid Tools (ACT) Accelerator, which
aims to help develop and ensure access to vaccines, medicines, and tests against
COVID-19 and strengthen healthcare systems, is still $18.5 billion short of its
funding target for this year.
The Rome summit brought together some 20 heads of state and
government alongside organizations such as the WTO, African Union, and World
Bank — as proof that the world can come together to deal with COVID-19.
Microsoft founder and billionaire health philanthropist Bill
Gates was also invited and used his speech to call on rich nations to
"share dollars and doses."
Earlier this month, an influential report warned that the catastrophic scale of coronavirus pandemic could have been prevented.
The Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response said a "toxic cocktail" of dithering and poor coordination meant the warning signs went unheeded.
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