months, with g7 countries expected to pledge one billion doses in total. but will it be enough? not everyone is convinced. this g7 is meeting while the pandemic rages and what has been promised is some dose sharing. but it s not coming at the urgency that we need, it s not coming at the volume that we need, and it s not coming with the financing that we need. what campaigners want is notjust more money to buy doses, but also for richer countries to share technical know how so they can produce the vaccines themselves. so, as world leaders begin to arrive in cornwall for the start of the summit, the challenge they face is how best to cooperate on covid, on climate change, on fixing the world economy. and, for once, their decisions could matter. james landale, bbc news, cornwall. 0ur chief political correspondent, adam fleming, is in cornwall for the summit.
good morning to you. this morning we can get that wonderful view from where you are from cornwall, looking out over the ocean. bring us up to date. it pledges around the vaccines. that is something tangible that has kicked off the start of g7 effectively. some people say not enough but that is possibly a different issue. what else can we expect on the agenda? that different issue. what else can we expect on the agenda? different issue. what else can we expect on the agenda? that is the first thing we expect on the agenda? that is the first thing we can expect on the agenda? that is the first thing we can point expect on the agenda? that is the first thing we can point to - expect on the agenda? that is the first thing we can point to and - expect on the agenda? that is the first thing we can point to and say| first thing we can point to and say it is a commitment with a number attached which you are right, for the people campaigning for richer countries to help poorer countries,