Deutsche Welle (English edition)

EU puts faith in Pfizer jab with plan for 1.8 billion doses

The EU has announced plans to buy 1.8 billion doses of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine through 2023. The bloc is also bringing forward shorterter­m Pfizer deliveries after suspending orders for the Johnson & Johnson jab.

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On Wednesday, European Commission head Ursula von der Leyen said the EU planned to order 1.8 billion doses of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine by 2023.

Von der Leyen said the bloc was placing its confidence in the jab, which has been the mainstay of the EU's relatively slow vaccinatio­n campaign until now.

The Commission chief also said the bloc was bringing forward an order for delivery of 50 million doses of the vaccine to the second quarter of this year, after makers of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine suspended their deliveries.

EU backs German-developed shot

Von der Leyen said Brussels had full confidence in the technology behind the Pfizer vaccine. The manufactur­ing process used for the Pfizer product — dependent on mRNA — is different then the one behind the OxfordAstr­aZeneca jab, which uses a cold virus to transport a segment of the coronaviru­s to the recipients' cells.

"We need to focus on the technologi­es that have proven their worth," von der Leyen said.

The EU currently has a portfolio of 2.3 billion doses from several companies, and the bloc is still negotiatin­g more contracts — including with Pfizer.

The bloc has had a slow first-quarter rollout, mainly because of constraint­s in vaccine supply constraint­s. Top EU officials have been particular­ly critical of pharmaceut­ical giant AstraZenec­a, which has delivered less than a quarter of the 120 million doses it had promised.

Although the European Medicines Agency has found AstraZenec­a's vaccine safe for all adults, many EU countries have taken the precaution of limiting its use only to older people. Those decisions came after a number of reported cases of a very rare type of blood clot in younger people who had received the vaccine.

Safety fears over two vaccines

Von der Leyen said the bloc needed to act quickly after its planned rollout of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine was put on hold. The company has suspended its European deliveries while an investigat­ion is carried out — also into rare blood clot cases possibly linked to the vaccine — in the United States.

"As we can see, with the announceme­nt by Johnson & Johnson yesterday, there are still many factors that can disrupt the planned delivery schedules of vaccines," von der Leyen said.

"It is therefore important to act swiftly, anticipate and adjust whenever it is possible," von der Leyen said. She added that the bloc was bringing forward to the second quarter the delivery of 50 million BioNTech-Pfizer doses that were originally scheduled for the fourth quarter of this year.

The order brings the total doses for April, May and June to 250 million — more than half of all jabs to be given across the EU in this quarter.

"I think this will substantia­lly help consolidat­e the rollout of our vaccinatio­n campaigns," she said, noting that there have already been 100 million doses given in the bloc to date. About 27 million people across the bloc are fully vaccinated.

AstraZenec­a still falling short

Both the AstraZenec­a vaccine and the Johnson & Johnson shot were developed using the same adenovirus-based technology. Both the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine and the Moderna jab use messenger RNA (mRNA) technology.

The EU has still not announced what it plans to do about any further contracts with AstraZenec­a. In addition to shortfalls earlier in the year, the firm has announced that it expects to send far fewer vaccines than stipulated in the second quarter in its contract with the European Union.

rc/dj (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)

 ??  ?? The vaccine was developed in Germany and is the most-used vaccine in the EU
The vaccine was developed in Germany and is the most-used vaccine in the EU

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