FedEx, UPS announce first deliveries of COVID-19 vaccine in US
FedEx and UPS touted their first deliveries of Pfizer and BioNTech’s coronavirus vaccine Monday morning following its final approval over the weekend.
“We are one of the few companies with the global network and capabilities to keep critical supply chains moving during this unprecedented time,” FedEx Express President and CEO Don Colleran said in a statement. “Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, FedEx has delivered more than 55 kilotons of personal protective equipment, including more than two billion face masks, and more than 9,600 humanitarian aid shipments around the globe.”
We’ve safely made our first deliveries of @pfizer–@BioNTech_Group COVID-19 vaccines. We’re honored to be able to use our network to transport these critical vaccines in the U.S., and eventually the world. https://t.co/eYSIdMz1y3 pic.twitter.com/qulH7FBYDr
— FedEx (@FedEx) December 14, 2020
UPS also celebrated their first shipments of the vaccine.
“It was a whirlwind of a day that was months in the making,” the company tweeted.
“To our partners in the healthcare, logistics and government sectors, and to the @UPSers who made today’s #vaccine logistics possible…thank you!” it added.
It was a whirlwind of a day that was months in the making. To our partners in the healthcare, logistics and government sectors, and to the @UPSers who made today’s #vaccine logistics possible…thank you! https://t.co/UkHjlWcQiw
— UPS (@UPS) December 13, 2020
“We’re very, very proud to be part of this. We’re actually honored to be part of this and it’s a big emotional day for us. But we’re still working, we’re still on the job.” Wes Wheeler, President of UPS Healthcare, on the first day shipping coronavirus vaccines. pic.twitter.com/K2tljw7JWJ
— Ana Cabrera (@AnaCabrera) December 14, 2020
The first shipments of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccines left the pharmaceutical company’s facility in Portage, Mich., early Sunday.
Roughly 184,275 vials of the vaccine were shipped, according to CNN, which added that the company plans to send out 390,000 more vials on Monday.
Ahead of approval, Transportation Department officials said in early December that infrastructure was in place for immediate mass shipment of the vaccine, including dry ice to pack the drug in. Health care workers are set to be the first to receive the vaccine.
The director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also approved an advisory panel’s recommendation on Sunday, clearing the way for the first doses to be administered as early as Monday.
“The department has laid the groundwork for the safe transportation of the COVID-19 vaccine and is proud to support this historic endeavor,” Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao said in a statement.
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