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Home » IANS » NZ commits $18mn investment in Covid-19 vaccine development

NZ commits $18mn investment in Covid-19 vaccine development

By IANS
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Wellington, Sep 21 (IANS) The New Zealand government has committed to investing NZ$27 million ($18 million) in Covid-19 vaccine development through the global COVAX Facility, Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters said on Monday.

“The COVAX Facility is a key part of our Covid-19 Vaccine Strategy to obtain safe and effective vaccines,” Peters, who is also the Foreign Minister, said in a statement.

“It allows us to invest in a high-quality, diversified portfolio of Covid-19 vaccine candidates. This will ensure we are spreading risk and keeping our options open,” he added.

New Zealand expressed interest in joining the COVAX Facility in July, which allowed the country to support international efforts to shape how the facility works, he said.

It has officially confirmed its commitment to the COVAX Facility and will invest an initial amount of NZ$27 million to support development and manufacturing.

It will act as a pre-purchase should any of the vaccine candidates be successful, Peters said.

Additional funding will be required to purchase Covid-19 vaccines if any of the candidates in the COVAX Facility portfolio are successful, but the exact amount of additional funding is not yet known, he said.

This initial investment is part of the allocation the government announced in August from the Covid-19 Response and Recovery Fund, he added.

“The agreement will ensure that New Zealand receives enough vaccines to cover up to 50 percent of the population of New Zealand and the Realm, which includes Tokelau, Cook Islands and Niue,” said Peters.

“It’s important that all countries are able to access sufficient amounts of vaccines to protect their populations and contribute to getting the pandemic under control on a global level,” he added.

New Zealand has so far reported a total of 1,815 coronavirus cases, with 25 deaths.

–IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Newsd staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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