EU leaders feel the pressure over handling of
coronavirus pandemic
As European Council convenes for a summit, Commission
has no major breakthrough on vaccine rollout.
BY DAVID M.
HERSZENHORN AND JACOPO BARIGAZZI
February
24, 2021 11:57 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-leaders-feel-the-pressure-over-handling-of-coronavirus-pandemic/
As EU heads
of state and government convene by videoconference on Thursday afternoon, they
are under severe pressure to show concrete progress in managing the pandemic —
and many are looking to the European Commission for answers.
But
Brussels has no major breakthroughs to report, according to senior officials
and diplomats.
Vaccine
distribution remains slow. COVID variants from Britain, South Africa and Brazil
are spreading across the EU. And several capitals have once again unilaterally
shut their borders, posing a threat to commerce and drawing a written reprimand
from Brussels.
During the
European Council summit, Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is expected
to tell the 27 heads of state or government that a new task force has
identified potential locations that can be used to ramp up vaccine
manufacturing, but those increases are not expected for months. Efforts to
increase the sequencing of virus samples to detect more contagious, and
potentially deadly, mutations are also slow-going.
And plans
to speed up regulatory approval are expected to fully kick in only next autumn
for a second generation of vaccines targeting new variants. Meanwhile, the
Commission is still in the relatively early stages of working with capitals to
standardize a so-called “vaccine passport” — a medical record that Greece and
other Southern European countries would like to use in clearing passengers for
travel, especially to provide some relief for the suffering tourist industry.
While
officials and diplomats insist that cooperation among EU countries is much
better than at the start of the pandemic a full year ago, Thursday’s summit
seems unlikely to yield any deliverables that the leaders can take home to
their constituents. Germany, the EU’s biggest and most influential member,
imposed some of the toughest border closures, setting an example that some
officials fear will be copied across the bloc.
“On the
coordination, it’s a real difficult matter and we are walking on thin ice on
this,” a senior official conceded on Wednesday. “Because leaders' main focus is
to do the best for their population and the way you do that is subject to
differences in member states.”
Still, the
official said the situation was better than a year ago, and that the stress on
leaders was understandable. “This is an unprecedented crisis,” the official
said, “and everybody has suffered from this.”
Several
officials attributed the tightening of border restrictions to the arrival of
faster-spreading COVID variants from the U.K., South Africa and Brazil.
Leaders are
focused most intensely on the question of when vaccines will be available on a
wide scale, but von der Leyen is expected to have only limited good news after
the recent announcements of production shortfalls. She will say that deliveries
are steadily increasing and a goal of vaccinating 70 percent of EU residents by
end of the summer remains in place.
But with
some countries like the Czech Republic facing a brutal and still ongoing second
wave of infections, and an acute shortage of critical care hospital beds, there
is little quick relief on the horizon.
Leaders
want “to listen to the president of the Commission, on where we stand with the
vaccines,” a senior diplomat said Wednesday. “Everybody will like to get more
vaccines faster but you know this is not the case. We have difficulties and not
only us in Europe. It’s a worldwide issue to get all the stuff that we need to
make the vaccines. That’s an issue. And then we have the production number.”
The senior
diplomat urged countries to show restraint in closing borders, given the
potential disruption to the EU’s single market. “We have to make sure that
freedom of movement of goods is unhampered and even if there are national
measures taken here and there,” the senior diplomat said.
Officials
said that during pre-summit consultations with European Council President
Charles Michel, some EU leaders had demanded further clarification about the
effectiveness of the vaccine made by Oxford/AstraZeneca, given doubts raised by
French President Emmanuel Macron, among others. The Commission, citing guidance
from the European Medicines Agency, has insisted the vaccine is effective and
safe to use.
Michel has
made clear that leaders want assurances that the Commission is maintaining
maximum pressure on vaccine manufacturers to fulfill their contractual
commitments. Von der Leyen is expected to confirm that is indeed the case,
citing work by a new task force led by Internal Market Commissioner Thierry
Breton. But the progress made by Breton’s task force is likely to offer little
consolation to citizens waiting impatiently for vaccinations.
Despite the
continuing shortage of vaccines, the senior official said the EU leaders would
issue a statement recommitting their pledge to help developing nations procure
vaccines.
“We are at
an early stage when it comes to vaccination in member states,” the official
said. “But many leaders have expressed a strong will to proceed with
international solidarity.”


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