From the CBC:
“Canada promises 73 million
more COVID-19 vaccine doses for the developing world”
Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia
Freeland said Saturday that Canada will donate millions more COVID-19 vaccine
doses to a global vaccine-sharing initiative as rich countries scramble to send
more shots to the developing world to help curb stubbornly high case counts.
Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Rome, Freeland
said Canada is boosting its existing commitment to COVAX, a vaccine
distribution program co-ordinated by the World Health Organization and other
groups, by some 73 million more shots to ensure COVID-19 vaccines are more
readily available worldwide.
Saturday's announcement is in
addition to the 127 million doses previously promised by Canada to COVAX. Of
the 73 million committed on Saturday, Canada will immediately contribute 10
million doses of Moderna to the vaccine-sharing alliance — product previously
allocated to Canada that will now be redistributed to other countries in need.
Canada will then supply cash to COVAX so it can procure 63 million more doses
by the end of 2022 — a total commitment of up to 200 million doses.
The issue of vaccine equity is a
top agenda item at this two-day gathering of the world's largest economies. The
Italian summit, the first major in-person meeting since the pandemic began
nearly two years ago, has also been convened to address climate issues and
pandemic-fuelled economic troubles such as inflation and supply chain
disruptions. While wealthy countries have fared well in procuring effective,
life-saving vaccines such as those offered by AstraZeneca, Pfizer and Moderna,
low- and middle-income countries have consistently struggled with access. At
the outset of the pandemic, COVAX was created to equitably distribute shots,
but it has been hampered by supply constraints — rich countries have stockpiled
vaccines — and delivery issues in countries on the African continent and
elsewhere.
Vaccine gap 'morally
unacceptable': Italian PM Based on research compiled by former British
prime minister Gordon Brown, who is leading a coalition of former world leaders
advocating for the better distribution of shots, Canada, the United States, the
European Union and Britain have a combined total of more than 240 million
unused vaccines on hand. At the same time, fewer than four per cent of people
in low-income countries are fully vaccinated. In a letter to Italian Prime
Minister Mario Draghi ahead of the G20 summit, Brown said this sort of lopsided
vaccine access is "plaguing the planet." Draghi signalled on
Saturday that he's heard the calls for co-ordinated action out of the summit
he's hosting. An economist by training, the Italian leader said stalled
vaccination rates are a human tragedy that leave the poorest more susceptible
to a deadly disease, as well as being a drag on the global economy. "These
differences are morally unacceptable and undermine the global recovery. We must
do all we can to reach 70 per cent by mid-2022," Draghi said at the
opening ceremony, referring to a World Health Organization goal to get everyone
worldwide at least one shot by next year.
Freeland's commitment isn't the
first time Canada has offered shots to those in need. Earlier this year, Canada
promised 40 million doses to COVAX, including some of the product it agreed to
buy from companies such as AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson and Novavax. The
government has also earmarked more than $500 million in cash to help COVAX buy
87 million doses and improve its delivery process. However, according to
government data, fewer than three million of the shots Canada has donated have
actually made it into the arms of people in the world's poorest countries.
^ I remember not too long ago
when Canada was receiving Covid Vaccine donations from Covax and from the United
States (just like a Third World Developing Country would) and now they are
donating Vaccines themselves. Maybe Canada has finally grown-up and gone from
shorts to pants (and I say that as a Dual Canadian-American Citizen.) ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/canada-promises-covid-vaccine-doses-1.6231465
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