NEW YORK, Sept 23 – The United States is significantly cutting back the number of Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine doses it will buy for donation to poorer nations this year, Pfizer said yesterday, citing diminished demand for the shots in those countries.

Pfizer said it agreed to reduce the number of doses it will deliver by year end to 600 million, down from the billion-dose commitment the US government made a year ago.

The United States will have an option to buy up to an additional 400 million shots for the programme after this year.

The drugmaker said it would have sufficient supply to deliver the full billion doses under the US commitment, but “we are seeing reduced demand in some low- and lower-middle-income countries due to barriers in administration and vaccine hesitancy.”

The US Department of Health and Human Services did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The revised terms of the contract were previously reported by Bloomberg.

Pfizer said it had already delivered 400 million vaccine doses in 79 countries under the US government contract.

The vaccine doses were donated through the Covax programme, run by the World Health Organisation and GAVI global vaccine alliance, which was intended to deliver Covid-19 shots to the world’s poorer countries.

The programme initially struggled to acquire enough vaccine to fulfil its mission, but improved output from manufacturers has led to a glut of doses in 2022.

Covax has been negotiating since June with vaccine manufacturers to cut or slow deliveries of 400 million to 600 million vaccine doses from its own contracts. – Reuters