AstraZeneca to deliver 9M more coronavirus
vaccine doses to EU
Drugmaker will also expand manufacturing capacity in
Europe, Commission president says.
BY HELEN
COLLIS
January 31,
2021 8:45 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/astrazeneca-to-deliver-more-coronavirus-vaccine-doses-to-eu/
AstraZeneca
will deliver 9 million more doses of its coronavirus vaccine to the EU than it
offered last week, the European Commission announced, following a week of escalating
tensions over massive anticipated shortfalls.
Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen said Sunday after a virtual meeting with the
CEOs of vaccine producers including AstraZeneca that the company will now send
a total of 40 million doses in the first quarter of the year and start
deliveries one week earlier than scheduled. It will also expand its
manufacturing capacity in Europe.
AstraZeneca's
revelation that it would fall short of expectations by some 75 million doses
sparked a standoff with the Commission over the terms of the company's
contract, and also prompted Brussels to impose export controls on vaccines
leaving the bloc.
All three
companies whose vaccines have now been approved in the EU — BioNTech/Pfizer,
Moderna and, since Friday, AstraZeneca — have signaled that they cannot fully
meet delivery schedules.
Von der
Leyen's meeting Sunday included the CEOs of the pharmaceutical companies with
which Brussels has signed advance-purchase agreements for vaccines:
BionNTech/Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson, Curevac and
Sanofi.
“The
discussion [with CEOs] explored requirements for very rapid development,
manufacturing and regulatory approval of vaccines for COVID-19 variants in the
EU,” the Commission said in a readout, adding: “It was a very constructive
meeting, with numerous practical suggestions.”
After the
meeting, the Commission also reiterated plans to create a new agency to help
speed up vaccine development and better respond to future pandemics. The
Commission said in a statement the new EU Health Emergency Preparedness and
Response Authority (HERA) will “deliver a more structured approach to pandemic
preparedness,” with the aim of better anticipating threats and how to respond
to them, as well as developing vaccines more rapidly.
Few details
were given on the role and powers of HERA, or who will lead it. But “industry
will be an important partner,” the Commission said.
“Work with
industry will focus both on improving Europe's pandemic preparedness in the
medium term and on helping address more immediate challenges linked to
COVID-19,” the statement said.
To lay the
groundwork for HERA, the Commission is launching a pilot program on bio-defense
preparedness to fund the design and development of vaccines and scale up
manufacturing in the short and medium term, and also target new variants of
COVID-19, the Commission said.
“The
pandemic highlighted that manufacturing capacities are a limiting factor. It is
essential to address these challenges,” the statement said.
Health
Commissioner Stella Kyriakides and Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton
also attended the virtual meeting with CEOs, as did von der Leyen‘s coronavirus
special advisor Peter Piot, and Moncef Slaoui of the U.S. Operation Warp Speed,
as well as the head of the European Medicines Agency, Emer Cooke.
Further
discussions will take place with industry and other relevant sectors over the
following weeks, the Commission said.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário