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News > Germany

EU Buys 4 Million Pfizer Vaccines for Virus Hotspots

  • People queue to enter a store in Berlin, Germany, on March 9, 2021.

    People queue to enter a store in Berlin, Germany, on March 9, 2021. | Photo: Xinhua

Published 11 March 2021
Opinion

Health authorities explained that the doses will be available to all European Union countries on a pro-rata basis according to their population.

The European Commission (EC) announced on Wednesday announced that the European Union (EU) will receive an additional four million doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine by the end of March to address the need in virus hotspots. 

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The EU reached an agreement with the manufacturer for the extra doses to be delivered in the next two weeks to its member states, in a bid to tackle coronavirus hotspots and facilitate free border movement.

New variants of the coronavirus have caused increased infections in hotspots like Tyrol in Austria, Nice and Moselle in France, Bolzano in Italy, and some parts of Bavaria and Saxony in Germany. So far, the Pfizer vaccine has proven highly effective against all currently known variants of the coronavirus.

The additional jabs will help the EU countries keep the virus spread under control, and help ensure or restore free movement of goods and people. Germany, Belgium, Hungary, Finland, Denmark, and Sweden have shut down national borders to tackle the new variants. The European Commission, however, has urged them to replace the travel ban with more proportionate and targeted measures.

The extra doses will be available to all EU states "on a pro-rata basis according to their population," the EC Spokesperson for Health Stefan de Keersmaecker said, adding that the commission has ordered 600 million doses of BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine, the biggest early purchase agreement among the six ones that secure 2.6 billion doses for the EU.

With three COVID-19 vaccines approved by the European Medicines Agency, the bloc has rolled out a vaccination campaign aiming at inoculating 70 percent of the adult population by Sept. 21.

Meanwhile, 263 candidate vaccines are still being developed worldwide in countries including Germany, China, Russia, Britain, and the United States.

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