Japan likely to hit Covid-19 herd immunity in October, months after Olympics — researcher

25 January 2021 - 10:21
By Reuters
Tokyo and its surrounding prefectures have entered the second half of a month-long state of emergency imposed amid a third wave of Covid-19 coronavirus that has seen infection rates climb to unprecedented levels throughout the country.
Image: Yuichi Yamazaki/Getty Images Tokyo and its surrounding prefectures have entered the second half of a month-long state of emergency imposed amid a third wave of Covid-19 coronavirus that has seen infection rates climb to unprecedented levels throughout the country.

Japan is likely to achieve herd immunity to Covid-19 through mass inoculations only months after the planned Tokyo Olympics, even though it has locked in the biggest quantity of vaccines in Asia, according to a London-based forecaster.

That would be a blow to Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga who has pledged to have enough shots for the populace by the middle of 2021, as it trails most major economies in starting Covid-19 inoculations.

“Japan looks to be quite late in the game,” Rasmus Bech Hansen, the founder of British research firm Airfinity, told Reuters. “They're dependent on importing many (vaccines) from the US And at the moment, it doesn't seem very likely they will get very large quantities of for instance, the Pfizer vaccine.”

Hansen said Japan will not reach a 75% inoculation rate, a benchmark for herd immunity, until about October, about two months after the close of the Summer Games.

Japan has arranged to buy 314 million doses from Pfizer, Moderna Inc and AstraZeneca Plc, and that would be more than enough for its population of 126 million.

But problems seen in vaccine rollouts elsewhere stir doubt that Japan will get those supplies on time.

Taro Kono, Japan's vaccine programme chief, said last week it would begin its first shots in February, starting with 10,000 medical workers, but he walked back on a goal to secure enough vaccine supplies by June.

Japan is particularly vulnerable because its initial inoculation plan is dependent on Pfizer doses, which are at risk of being taken back by US authorities to fight the pandemic there.

“There simply aren't enough vaccines for all the countries that Pfizer made agreements with,” Hansen said.

“America needs 100 million more Pfizer vaccines to be on the safe side to reach their goals, and a lot of those 100 million would come from the Japan pile.”

Representatives from Pfizer and Japan's health ministry did not immediately respond to Airfinity's forecasts. Previously, Pfizer has stated that the company was working with Japanese regulators “to make Covid-19 vaccine doses available as quickly as possible to the people in Japan.” 

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