The United States plans to invest billions of dollars in expanding COVID-19 vaccine manufacturing capacity and make available an additional one billion doses per year, White House COVID-19 coordinator Jeff Zients said on Wednesday.
Activists have pressured President
Joe Biden's administration to increase
vaccine supply to poorer countries.
Zients said the government was preparing to offer makers of the mRNA
vaccines substantial help to expand infrastructure and capacity, including facilities, equipment, staff or training.
Pfizer/
BioNTech and Moderna are the only makers of mRNA
vaccines, though Zients said subcontractors of those companies would also be included.
Production will start in the second half of 2022, he said.
The investment in
vaccine production is part of a private-public partnership to address
vaccine needs at home and around the world and to prepare for future pandemics, he said. It will be paid for with funds from the American Rescue Plan Biden signed into law in March.
In the short term, the program would make a significant amount of
COVID-19
vaccine doses available at cost for global use. In the long term, it would help establish sustained domestic manufacturing capacity to rapidly produce
vaccines for future threats, Zients said.
Zients said 80% of Americans 12 and older have received at least one
COVID-19
vaccine dose, highlighting a milestone in efforts to curb the spread of the deadly virus.
He also said 2.6 million kids aged 5-11 will have received their first shot of the
COVID-19
vaccine by the end of Wednesday.