It is a monumental undertaking to have designed a new multilateral mechanism for the procurement and delivery of vaccines. I would point to a few specific milestones that give us comfort and confidence in how effective the mechanism has been.
First, the COVAX mechanism was able to deliver its first doses to Ghana in February 2021, mere weeks after those doses received initial regulatory approval from the WHO. It represents the first time that a novel product in the vaccine space like this was made available so early in an equitable way around the world.
Another significant milestone earlier this year was achieving a billion doses delivered. For many of us, it was a key moment to recognize the enormity of not just the effort but also the result in progress that COVAX has made.
At this stage, with over 1.3 billion doses shipped and many more planned deliveries in the coming weeks and months, we feel that COVAX is the key platform positioned to provide support to countries that require it. It offers end-to-end integrated support, including technical assistance, planning support, cold chain assistance, and local administration and rollout support. When we set out to build this new mechanism with a number of other allies, it was important not just to position COVAX for effective procurement, but also to be able to procure safe and effective vaccines that would respond to what countries require and then to complement that with comprehensive support to strengthen immunization systems in countries.
I mentioned in my opening remarks that there were delays last spring and summer that the world faced. Production was not able to keep pace with the demand that spiked around the world. By about October or November, though, COVAX was well positioned to meet those needs of countries and it achieved a milestone of over 350 million doses delivered in December alone.