Guernsey Press

Australia signs deal for Oxford coronavirus vaccine

The country’s leader promised to make doses ‘as mandatory as you can’.

Published
Last updated

Australia has ordered 25 million doses of a Covid-19 vaccine being developed by Oxford University in partnership with pharmaceutical firm AstraZeneca, the country’s prime minister said.

Scott Morrison promised to make the vaccine “as mandatory as you can” in an interview with Melbourne’s 3AW radio station, before touring AstraZeneca’s laboratory in Sydney.

He told reporters at the facility: “Today is a day of hope and Australia needs hope, the world needs hope, when it comes to this coronavirus.

In another radio interview on Wednesday, Mr Morrison said he had spoken with French leader Emmanuel Macron recently about how the AstraZeneca vaccine was “one of the best prospects in the world today”.

The British-Swedish company is the largest company listed on the London Stock Exchange by market capitalisation.

Scott Morrison and Boris Johnson
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison (left) has ordered enough doses of the vaccine being developed by Oxford for every Australian (Neil Hall/PA)

It is one of six different coronavirus vaccine candidates in development that the UK has access to, across four different types, representing some 340 million doses.

Priority groups such as frontline health workers, those with serious diseases, the elderly and ethnic minorities are first in line to receive a jab, should a vaccine be approved.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.