UK to donate more than 100m surplus vaccine doses, says PM
Boris Johnson says the UK will start donating coronavirus vaccines to poorer countries in the next few weeks.
More than 100m surplus doses will be delivered in the next year, he announced ahead of the G7 summit.
US President Joe Biden has promised half a billion doses of Pfizer vaccines to 92 low and middle-income countries and the African Union.
The first 5m doses from the UK will be given by the end of September, with another 25m by the end of the year.
The prime minister said: "As a result of the success of the UK's vaccine programme we are now in a position to share some of our surplus doses with those who need them.
"In doing so we will take a massive step towards beating this pandemic for good."
He said he hoped his fellow leaders at the summit in Carbis Bay, Cornwall, which starts on Friday, would "make similar pledges so that, together, we can vaccinate the world by the end of next year".
The group of leaders of wealthy nations is expected to collectively agree to provide a billion doses of coronavirus vaccines in a collective effort to end the pandemic.
The leaders of Canada, Japan, France, Germany and Italy as well as the US and the UK, are also setting out a plan to expand vaccine manufacturing to help hit that goal.
Speaking in Cornwall, Mr Biden said: "The United States is providing these half billion doses with no strings attached. No strings attached.
"Our vaccine donations don't include pressure for favours, or potential concessions. We're doing this to save lives."
It is not the first contribution to global vaccination by the UK government - it has already donated over £500m to Covax, the scheme that distributes vaccines to the world's poorest countries.
And it helped develop the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine, which is available at cost price - with two-thirds of the 400m doses going to low and middle-income countries, including 170m to India.
Mr Johnson wants the G7 leaders to encourage other pharmaceutical companies to also provide vaccines at cost price, while the pandemic continues.
About a fifth of the doses being donated by the UK will be delivered through specific agreements with countries in need, with the rest being donated through Covax.
All adults in the UK are expected to have been offered a first coronavirus vaccine dose by the end of July.
The government has ordered more than 500m doses of seven of the most promising vaccines, including the four so far approved for use.
It is hoped that the surplus doses of vaccine could help prevent the spread of the virus around the world and in doing so, restrict the emergence of more new variants.
The donations announcement comes after the UK went back on a commitment to spend 0.7% of national income on overseas aid, and instead cutting that to 0.5%, citing the pandemic's effect on public finances.
The donation of vaccines will count as extra aid spending on top of the £10bn promised under the reduced target.
Zoe Abrams, executive director at the British Red Cross, said the promise on vaccines was "heartening" but added: "While every commitment must be welcomed, more needs to be done, and fast."
And Lis Wallace, head of UK advocacy at anti-poverty campaigners One, said it was "not happening anywhere near fast enough", calling on Mr Johnson to start sharing doses straight away.
June 11, 2021 at 09:29AM
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-57436535
Labels: BBC News
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