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CureVac deal takes EU's Covid-19 vaccine supplies close to two billion

The deal will be authorised by the European Commission tomorrow, Ursula von der Leyen said
The deal will be authorised by the European Commission tomorrow, Ursula von der Leyen said

The European Union has struck a deal for up 405 million doses of German biotech firm CureVac's potential Covid-19 vaccine, the head of the EU executive has said, taking total supplies secured by the bloc to nearly two billion doses.

The deal with CureVac follows EU supply agreements with AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson, Sanofi, and Pfizer for a combined 1.4 billion doses of their potential vaccines.

"I am glad to announce a new agreement to buy up to 405 million doses of a vaccine produced by the European company CureVac," European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said, adding the contract was negotiated after EU funding to the company to develop its vaccine.

The EU, with a population of about 450 million, has been in talks with CureVac for its experimental Covid-19 vaccine at least since July, an internal EU document seen by Reuters shows.

The deal will be authorised by the Commission tomorrow, Ms von der Leyen said, while the actual signature will take place some days later.

The Commission president also said she hoped to finalise a deal soon with Moderna for its Covid-19 vaccine, which today announced positive interim results from large-scale clinical trials.

Under advance purchase agreements negotiated by the EU during the pandemic, the bloc makes a non-refundable down-payment to a vaccine maker to secure a certain number of doses for an agreed price, which will then be paid by EU states willing to buy the shot only after it is authorised as safe and effective by the EU drugs regulator.

The price agreed for the vaccine has not been disclosed.

The deal will initially cover 225 million doses, with an option to buy another 180 million.

The Department of Health has said that Ireland will be allocated 1.1% of the European portfolio of vaccines.


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CureVac was not immediately available for comment.

CureVac's approach is based on so-called messenger RNA (mRNA), pieces of genetic code that prompt human cells to produce therapeutic proteins - the same technology used by Moderna and also Pfizer/BioNTech, the other major potential vaccine to have reported positive late-stage trial results.