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A nurse holds a Covid-19 vaccine candidate produced by Chinese company Sinovac Biotech at the Sao Lucas Hospital in Brazil in August. Photo: AFP

More than 150 nations join global coronavirus vaccine plan, but US and China absent

  • Trump administration has already secured supplies through bilateral deals, prompting accusations of selfish behaviour to the detriment of poor countries
  • Vaccine alliance officials say dialogue continues with Beijing on scheme to deliver 2 billion doses around the world by end of 2021

Some 156 nations have joined a global scheme for fair distribution of future vaccines against Covid-19, an alliance led by the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Monday, but superpowers China and the United States did not sign up.

US President Donald Trump’s government has already secured future supplies through bilateral deals, prompting accusations of selfish behaviour to the detriment of poor countries.

China, where the coronavirus was first reported, was also missing on the list of 64 rich nations who joined the so-called Covax plan to deliver 2 billion vaccine doses round the world by the end of 2021, prioritising health care workers and the vulnerable.

But alliance officials said dialogue continued with Beijing.

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China prepares for coronavirus vaccine mass production though clinical trials are not yet complete

China prepares for coronavirus vaccine mass production though clinical trials are not yet complete

The scheme would account for about two-thirds of the world population, according to the WHO and GAVI vaccine alliance, which published the list of signatories after a deadline for binding commitments expired on Friday.

Dozens of vaccines are in testing for the coronavirus which has infected about 31 million people globally and killed nearly 1 million, a fifth of those in the United States.

“Covax will give the world the largest and most diverse portfolio of vaccine candidates,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at a virtual briefing.

“This is not charity, it’s in every country’s best interest. We sink or we swim together … This is not just the right thing to do, it’s the smart thing to do.”

With some wealthier nations reticent over Covax, the plan has highlighted the challenge of distributing vaccines equitably around a world of haves and have-nots.

Chinese researchers to test double doses of CanSino’s coronavirus vaccine candidate

The vaccine alliance said it expected another 38 wealthy countries to join the initiative in coming days.

It said it had received commitments for US$1.4 billion towards vaccine research and development, but a further US$700 million to US$800 million was urgently needed.

The alliance did not say which countries were providing funding while not planning to take supply of vaccines from the scheme. France and Germany have said they will source potential shots only via the European joint procurement scheme.

More than 150 potential vaccines are being developed and tested globally, with 38 in human trials.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: More than 150 nations join global jabs scheme
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