Victoria has gone a ninth consecutive day without recording a locally acquired case of coronavirus, as restrictions ease for Melbourne.
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The health department on Friday also confirmed there was one COVID-19 case in hotel quarantine, with the total number of active infections in the state remaining at 21.
Some 25,590 tests were processed in the 24 hours to Friday morning, while15,665 Victorians received a vaccine dose at one of the state-run hubs.
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It comes as Melbourne moved to the same restrictions currently in place in regional Victoria overnight.
Masks will no longer be required at schools and in workplaces where staff are not interacting with the public while retail, hospitality, stadiums and other venues will be able to increase their capacity and dancefloors can reopen.
Meanwhile, Australia will soon have access to up to one million doses of Pfizer vaccines per week, with supplies of the jab set to triple.
The country currently has between 300,000 and 350,000 Pfizer vaccines doses a week to administer.
That will jump to one million a week in the second half of July.
In August, Australia will receive 4.5 million doses of Pfizer vaccines, which is significantly more than first anticipated.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison is confident the extra Pfizer supplies will give the troubled vaccine rollout a shot in the arm.
He believes the vaccine rollout can be completely by Christmas.
"We are just a whisker of one million doses being administered every single week and at that pace we get this job done," Mr Morrison told the Seven Network on Friday.
Pfizer is the recommended vaccine for people aged under 60 so the boost to supplies should help improve vaccination rates.
Just 10 per cent of Australians aged over 16 are fully vaccinated with two doses.
Deputy Opposition Leader Richard Marles said the boosted Pfizer supplies were desperately needed.
"We need those doses because the prime minister promised we would be at the front of the queue and in fact we're languishing at the bottom of the OECD ladder," he told the Nine Network.
"That's all because the prime minister said this wasn't a race and in fact is obviously is a race, a race against the virus.
"The failure to properly vaccinate the population is what's underpinning the lockdowns we are experiencing around the country now, particularly in NSW."
National cabinet will meet on Friday to discuss the coronavirus outbreak in NSW and a proposal to make vaccines mandatory for disability workers.
Sydney is in the grip of an ongoing outbreak, with NSW reporting 38 new local coronavirus cases on Thursday as the city and surrounds prepare for at least a third week of stay-at-home orders.
Australians under lockdown in NSW have been urged to get their second AstraZeneca dose within eight weeks of their first jab.
A 12-week gap between AstraZeneca jabs has been recommended as the most effective way to protect people.
But the prime minister wants people in the worst-affected areas who have received a first jab to make second dose appointments closer to eight weeks.
He said this was consistent with the advice of the national expert immunisation panel known as ATAGI.
In the three Sydney councils areas with the most infections, about half of those aged over 70 have received a first dose.
An extra 300,000 AstraZeneca - which is recommended for people over 60 - and Pfizer vaccines will be made available for NSW.
Federal, state and territory leaders are expected to make vaccines mandatory for disability support workers at Friday's national cabinet meeting.
A similar order has already been imposed on aged care employees, who must receive at least one jab by mid-September to keep working in the sector.
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