Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pfizer delays spur frustratio­n

Nations’ plans upset by slowed COVID-19 vaccine shipments

- By Raf Casert

BRUSSELS — Frustratio­n is mounting from Europe to North America over reduced shipments of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine while the U.S. pharmaceut­ical company increases production capacity at its Belgian plant. Government­s say it is costing critical time during the early stages of the rollout to care homes and hospital personnel.

Italy has threatened legal action. The leader of Canada’s most populous province said Pfizer’s chief executive should be chased “with a firecracke­r.” A top European Union official icily invoked the principle of “pacta sunt servanda,” a Latin phrase meaning “agreements must be kept.”

The EU and many nations are under pressure for what is seen as the slow start to their vaccinatio­n campaigns compared to countries like Israel and the United Kingdom. Pfizer compounded the problem last Friday when it announced a temporary reduction in deliveries so it could upscale its Puurs, Belgium plant, which supplies all shots delivered outside the United States.

The delay, which the pharma giant said would last for a few weeks, affects not only the number of people who can get inoculated during that period but also throws off the careful choreograp­hy that government­s mapped out to get elderly residents and caregivers the required two doses within a strict timetable of several weeks.

“It means huge complicati­ons for us,” Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis said. Similar complaints could be heard in several other EU nations, from Denmark to Belgium.

“Indeed,” added European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, “we were all surprised by the announceme­nt of Pfizer-biontech to have a delay.”

The EU now expects Pfizer to deliver across the 27-nation bloc 92 percent of what was expected over this week and the next one. The missing 8 percent is expected to be recovered during the week of Feb. 15

Von der Leyen said the immediate challenge would be securing enough doses to make sure people who already had their first shot of Pfizer vaccine received their second jab within the recommende­d interval.

Overall, the EU is slated to get up to 600 million doses from Pfizer.

A number of U.S. states also are reporting difficulty getting their hands on enough vaccines. The full explanatio­n for the apparent mismatch between supply and demand was unclear, but last week the U.S. Health and Human Services Department suggested that states had unrealisti­c expectatio­ns for how much vaccine was on the way.

Pfizer told The Associated Press late Wednesday that any small step backwards taken now would result in a huge jump ahead later in the year. The company originally expected to produce 1.3 billion doses this year.

“We’ve explored innovative ways to increase the number of doses we’re able to supply this year, and we now believe that we can potentiall­y deliver approximat­ely 2 billion doses by the end of 2021,” the company said in a statement.

But even if that point is understood, many officials in Europe said they were disappoint­ed by what they saw as a lack of smooth communicat­ion.

“The problem lies mainly with Pfizer’s short notice announceme­nt,” German Health Minister Jens Spahn said. “That’s an upsetting issue.”

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