GAVI, the vaccine-financing alliance, approved an extra $189 million for the African Vaccine Manufacturing Accelerator (AVMA) at a board meeting that closed on Thursday 2 July, on top of the programme's existing $1 billion 1. Of the new money, $139 million is earmarked to buy vaccines made in Africa, with the first cash expected to reach an African manufacturer in the second half of 2026, a first for the scheme. The board also set Gavi 6.0 targets for 2026 to 2030: reach 500 million more children and prevent an estimated 8 to 9 million deaths.
GAVI's approval landed the same fortnight the African Union pledged $910 million toward the Ebola response and Africa CDC won direct access to the World Bank-hosted Pandemic Fund , the continent assembling its own response money. An African plant still needs the technology transfer and sample access that the stalled PABS annex is meant to guarantee, so the money approved by GAVI and the deadlock in Geneva are two ends of one problem. Africa can now finance the plant; what it lacks is the legal right to make and keep what comes out of it.
