Taiwan's Foxconn and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) said on Monday they had agreed to buy 10 million doses of Germany's BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. The total cost of the deal is reported to be about $350 million. Taiwan's government has tried for months to buy the vaccine directly from BioNTech. The government of Taiwan has blamed mainland China for barring an agreement it was supposed to sign with the company earlier this year. China denies that it blocked the vaccine sale. Mainland China claims the self-ruled island as its own territory. BioNTech’s sales agent in mainland China, Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceutical Group, said Sunday that an agreement had been signed. But it did not give details of when the vaccines would be provided. Terry Gou is the chairman of Foxconn. Gou wrote on his Facebook page that he was thankful the deal had been completed. Foxconn and TSMC will each buy 5 million doses. Foxconn will buy its vaccines through the YongLin Foundation. The doses will be donated to the government which will then supply them to medical services. Gou said, "But we can't relax, because we will continue to work hard to push for the delivery time and quantity." Taiwan’s government agreed to permit the technology companies to negotiate for the vaccines because of public pressure about its vaccine program. Taiwan's Cabinet said the vaccines would be donated at no cost to the government. Cabinet spokesperson Lo Ping-cheng said BioNTech signed the contract on Sunday. He said that the government was already looking to buy more from both AstraZeneca and Moderna. Taiwan wants to buy 15 million next generation vaccines from Moderna for 2022 and 2023. The United States and Japan have together donated almost 5 million doses to the island to help speed up vaccinations.
