The European Commission will sign
a deal to secure up to 300 million doses of the experimental coronavirus
vaccine developed by BioNTech and Pfizer.
The European
Commission will sign a deal to secure up to 300 million doses of the
experimental coronavirus vaccine developed by BioNTech
and Pfizer.
Ursula von der
Leyen, the president of the EU's executive arm, said the commission will
authorize the deal on Wednesday after working tirelessly to secure doses of
potential vaccines in recent months.
This is the most
promising vaccine so far, von der Leyen said. Once this vaccine becomes
available, our plan is to deploy it quickly, everywhere in Europe. Pfizer
said Monday that early results from the vaccine suggests the shots may be a
surprisingly robust 90% effective at preventing COVID-19.
The European
Commission had already secured three other deals with pharmaceutical companies
allowing its 27 member states to buy nearly one billion doses of a potential
coronavirus vaccine.
And more will
come. Because we need to have a broad portfolio of vaccines based on different
technologies, von der Leyen said. We have already started working with member
states to prepare national vaccination campaigns. We are almost there. In the
meantime, let us be prudent, and stay safe.
The commission
said once a vaccine is ready, member states should have access to it at the
same time, and give priority to groups including healthcare workers and people
over 60 years, as well as people with health conditions making them more
vulnerable.
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