Millions more bottles' worth of critically needed infant formula are set to touch down on U.S. shores later this month, as the Biden administration continues its push to replenish the supply on the nation's empty shelves.
More than 3.2 million bottles' worth of formula will be airlifted in on planes donated by Delta Airlines in the coming weeks, ABC News is first to report.
Those some-212,000 pounds of Kendamil infant formula, from U.K. manufacturer Kendal Nutricare, will begin shipping into the country beginning on June 20.
Donated Delta planes will shuttle those formula shipments from Heathrow Airport in London to Logan Airport in Boston and Detroit Metro Airport, a White House official told ABC.
Upon distribution, it will be available for families' purchase at select U.S. retailers nationwide, as well as online, the administration says.
The newly announced flights are the latest in a lengthening list of formula shipments coming in through FDA's exercised import discretion; in total, Kendal Nutricare has committed to export at least 54 million 8-ounce bottles' worth to the U.S.
Pallets of baby formula are unloaded after being sent in through Operation Fly Formula, at Dulles International Airport in Dulles, Va., on May 25, 2022.
Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images
Friday's announcement also comes on the heels of two other large shipments putting wheels down in the U.S. just a day before.
On Thursday, nearly two million bottles' worth of infant formula came in from overseas: roughly 1.6 million 8-ounce bottles' worth of Nestlé formula, greeted in Texas by HHS Sec. Xavier Becerra; and the first of several flights donated by United Airlines coming into Dulles Airport outside Washington, D.C., altogether are expected to bring in about 3.7 million 8-ounce bottles' worth of additional Kendamil formula from the U.K., available at Target stores in the coming weeks.
It couldn't come soon enough for so many American families still scrambling to feed their children amid the urgent supply crisis.
Pallets of Nestle Health Science Alfamino Infant and Alfamino Junior formula sent in through Operation Fly Formula are unloaded from a US military aircraft at Indianapolis International Airport in Indianapolis, Indiana, on May 22, 2022.
Kaiti Sullivan/Bloomberg via Getty Images
So far, cumulatively, the White House says it has secured commitments to import upwards of 127.5 million bottles' worth. President Joe Biden, acknowledging the strain so many parents have been feeling, as well as political criticism from both Democrats and Republicans.
"There’s nothing more stressful than the feeling you can’t get what your child needs," he said meeting virtually with formula manufacturers and members of his administration, saying his team will use "every tool available" to get more formula on shelves "as quickly as possible."
"Still we have work to do," Biden said. "But we're making critical progress."