Frustrated EU leaders pass vaccine fight to
ambassadors
An internal squabble over extra vaccines was just the
latest controversy as the EU tries to speed its inoculation campaign.
BY DAVID M.
HERSZENHORN, JACOPO BARIGAZZI, HANS VON DER BURCHARD, LILI BAYER AND MAÏA DE LA
BAUME
March 26,
2021 1:57 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/european-council-eu-leaders-coronavirus-vaccines-ambassadors/
Suddenly,
the EU’s top diplomats — the Committee of Permanent Representatives — look more
like the Committee of Pro-Rata Referees.
After EU
heads of state and government spent hours arguing during a video summit on
Thursday about how to divvy up an extra load of 10 million coronavirus vaccine
doses, they gave up and asked diplomats to settle the matter.
The
decision to seek arbitration among the ambassadors came after Austrian
Chancellor Sebastian Kurz virtually sabotaged the meeting by insisting that his
country receive extra doses, even though European Commission data shows Austria
faring relatively well among EU nations in terms of vaccine supplies. There's also
the issue that all EU countries, Austria included, had previously agreed to a
pro-rata formula that gives each member state an equal chance to purchase their
fair share of shots.
But still,
they ducked and delegated the file.
It all
amounted to a notable role-reversal, given it's typically these EU leaders who
are called upon to resolve disputes that their ministers and ambassadors
cannot.
The
internal squabble was just the latest aspect of the EU’s coronavirus vaccine
program to become embroiled in controversy. And the fight underscored the
continuing pressure politicians are under to vaccinate their constituents as
fast as possible, with supplies scarce and a third coronavirus wave building
across the continent.
During the
virtual summit, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen presented
new data showing that EU-based vaccine manufacturers had shipped some 77
million doses internationally since Dec. 1, in addition to delivering 88
million doses within the EU’s 27 countries.
The
statistics were intended in part as a defense against criticism of the EU’s
vaccine rollout, but also as pushback against the U.K., which has raced ahead
in inoculating its own population but has not been exporting vaccines to help
the rest of the world. In fact, 21 million doses delivered to Britain came from
the EU, according to von der Leyen.
On
Wednesday, the Commission and the U.K. government had issued a joint statement
pledging to work together to increase vaccine production. But on Thursday
tensions flared again as von der Leyen noted she was unaware of the U.K.
exporting any doses and was looking forward to London demonstrating
“transparency.”
Squaring
the circle
The
drawn-out argument with Kurz annoyed some of the EU’s most senior leaders,
including German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte.
Some officials noted with exasperation that every EU country was allowed to
purchase vaccines according to the pro-rata formula, and the only discrepancies
were the result of some capitals — notably including Vienna — opting not to buy
their full allotment.
Even after
forgoing some purchase opportunities, Austria is still in the top 10 of EU
countries in two key categories: doses administered per 100 people over 18, and
doses administered per 100 people in the total population. Still, Kurz insisted
his country had somehow been shortchanged and demanded greater access to an
advance delivery of 10 million doses from BioNTech/Pfizer expected between
April 1 and June 30.
In their
conclusions, the leaders reiterated their commitment to the pro-rata formula,
but tasked the ambassadors to work out details. “We confirm the pro-rata
population key for the allocation of vaccines,” they said, adding: “We invite
the Committee of Permanent Representatives to address the issue of the speed of
deliveries of vaccines when allocating the 10 million BioNTech-Pfizer
accelerated doses in the second quarter of 2021 in a spirit of solidarity.”
Merkel,
speaking to reporters after the virtual summit, gently chided countries that
had not made use of their full allotment — a clear reference to Austria.
"After a long discussion, we asked Coreper to find a fair solution within
the framework of solidarity,” Mekel said, adding: “Of course we want to stick
to the pro-rata approach for each country and still apply solidarity
mechanisms.”
“It turns
out that not everyone has made use of pro-rata,” she said. “And now the issue
is how do we keep pro-rata as much as possible, even with the 10 million, and
still show solidarity toward those who don't yet have pro-rata share of vaccine
deliveries."
It is,
Merkel acknowledged, "something like squaring the circle."
Rutte, at
his own news conference, noted that Bulgaria, Latvia and Croatia were among EU
countries that genuinely need help obtaining more vaccines, but he pointedly
did not describe any special need for Austria.
“We think
that when you look at the template, that particularly Bulgaria, Latvia and
Croatia have an issue and we want to help,” Rutte said, adding: “Some others
also have asked to join this issue. For example, Austria. But when you look at
the template, Austria is not in a bad shape at the moment.”
Rutte
suggested the EU could re-evaluate the situation of individual countries as
time goes on but said there was no current reason to grant Austria special
consideration.
Kurz claims
victory
Nevertheless,
Kurz sought to claim victory on Twitter, noting that the decision on how to
divide the doses would be made by ambassadors and not by the EU’s vaccine
steering board, a panel of experts that includes one representative from each
of the 27 countries. Kurz also suggested he had won an adjustment in the formula,
but there was no evidence of this being true. “With the 10 million additional
doses of vaccine, a fairer delivery of vaccines in the EU should be achieved in
the second quarter,” he tweeted.
Leaders
readily acknowledged the pressure they feel in responding to the pandemic.
"We are in a race against time between the third wave and the vaccine
rollout across Europe,” French President Emmanuel Macron told reporters.
"And this battle for vaccines is the battle we must win in coming weeks and
months."
On
Wednesday, the Commission put forward a plan to toughen its vaccine export
control rules, potentially creating additional powers to block shipments from
companies not fulfilling their contractual obligations to the EU. The new rules
would also allow shipments to be stopped to countries that produce vaccines but
do not export doses, or to countries that have higher vaccination rates than
the EU. Officials have insisted they hope not to use the restrictions but that
they are necessary to maintain pressure.
Belgian
Prime Minister Alexander De Croo said leaders hoped to avoid any disruption in
global supply chains that might occur as part of a vaccine trade war. “Global
value chains should remain as frictionless as possible,” De Croo said. “The
moment that export restrictions and so on would be used in a non-targeted way,
you would end up with only losers, and the losers would be our population who
would get vaccines later.”
De Croo
said it was important that restrictions are imposed only on producers “not
respecting what we agreed on” and that such bans serve as a measure of “last
resort.”
But even
contemplating such extreme measures is a remarkable place for EU leaders to be
just months after the bloc proudly announced its agreements to secure several hundred
million vaccines.
Now, EU
leaders are sniping at each other and at the U.K., and seething at AstraZeneca,
the British-Swedish biomedical giant whose production problems have left the EU
tens of millions of doses short of expectations. Von der Leyen on Thursday
night reflected on what might have been, had the bloc just gotten what it
thought it was promised.
"We
know we could have been much faster if all pharmaceutical companies had
fulfilled their contracts,” she said.
Hanne Cokelaere, Cristina Gallardo, Carlo Martuscelli and
Rym Momtaz contributed reporting.


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