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Canada: Commitment to donate 200 million installments to developing countries by 2022

His government Canada pledged, during a G20 summit, to provide millions of extra doses of vaccine to poor countries to help fight the new coronavirus pandemic worldwide.

“Canada will allocate a total of (…) at least 200 million installments to the COVAX facility by the end of 2022”, noted the Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trinto in a press release he released.

Of these, 10 million doses of American Moderna will be offered “quickly” to developing countries, an “immediate” commitment from the Canadian government.

The COVAX mechanism, which is mainly coordinated by the World Vaccine Alliance and the World Health Organization, will in theory allow 92 states and regions in need to receive free vaccines with funding from the most prosperous countries.

Still, Canada is committed to providing “$ 15 million to help increase vaccine production in South Africa”, stressed during a press conference given in Rome by the Deputy Prime Minister of Canada and Minister of Finance, Christia Freeland.

This amount is expected to contribute to the creation of a “technology transfer center” so that vaccines with messenger RNA against COVID-19 can be produced in the area, Ms. Freeland clarified.

“We do not control production, but by 2022, we are confident that it will be possible to contribute to this level,” she said, calling Canada’s commitment “sincere” and “very important.”

In August, the US pharmaceutical industry Moderna announced plans to build a vaccine plant in Canada, the first outside the US.

According to the Canadian government, less than three million installments of the total of 40 million that the country has promised to allocate to the COVAX facility had been received by Saturday, but additional deliveries are expected to be made “in the coming days”.

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