Santa Cruz Sentinel

Vaccine supply conflict grows

- By Zeke Miller, Raf Casert, and Samuel Petrequin

WASHINGTON » President Joe Biden’s administra­tion is stockpilin­g tens of millions of doses of a COVID-19 vaccine whose authorizat­ion in the U.S. remains uncertain, frustratin­g U.S. allies who say those doses should be used now to save lives overseas.

The standoff is part of a growing global debate over who should have access to hundreds of millions of doses of vaccine that pharmaceut­ical companies are churning out in the U.S. Besides generating ill will, Biden’s insistence on an excess supply for America is potentiall­y creating new openings for geopolitic­al rivals Russia and China.

A two-dose vaccine from AstraZenec­a has received emergency clearance from the European Union and World Health Organizati­on but not from the U.S. Now America’s partners are prodding Biden to release his supply, noting that the administra­tion has lined up enough doses of three already-authorized vaccines to cover

every American adult by the end of May and the entire U.S. population by the end of July.

AstraZenec­a says that the U.S.-produced vaccines are “owned” by the U.S. government and that sending them overseas would require White House approval.

“We understand other government­s may have reached out to the U.S. government about donation of AstraZenec­a doses, and we’ve asked the U.S. government to give thoughtful considerat­ion to these requests,” Gonzalo Viña, a spokesman for AstraZenec­a, said in a statement.

Even though the 27-nation European Union is eager to relaunch a more fruitful trans-Atlantic relationsh­ip after the bruising Trump presidency, the vaccine issue is proving to be a thorny topic, with some in Europe seeing it as a continuati­on of former President Donald Trump’s “America First” focus.

EU member states’ ambassador­s discussed the challenge this week. The German government said on Friday it was in contact with U.S. officials about vaccine supplies but stressed that the European Commission has the lead when it comes to procuring shots for member states.

Biden and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen have directed representa­tives to discuss supply chains in the vaccine production.

“Hopefully, we will be in a position on both sides of the Atlantic to ensure that sufficient quantities of vaccine doses are distribute­d out in line with the schedule so as to complete the vaccinatio­n campaigns,” EU commission chief spokesman Eric Mamer said.

Well over 10 million doses of AstraZenec­a’s vaccine are stockpiled in the U.S. for use here.

“We want to be oversuppli­ed and overprepar­ed,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday, so Americans can still be swiftly vaccinated in the event of unforeseen issues with the existing production timeline.

Asked about the stockpiled vaccine, White House COVID-19 coordinato­r Jeff Zients said, “We have a small inventory of AstraZenec­a so, if approved, we can g et that inventory out to the American people as quickly as possible.”

Drug manufactur­ers that received federal assistance in developing or expanding vaccine manufactur­ing were required to sell their first doses to the U.S. In the case of AstraZenec­a, whose vaccine was initially expected to be the first to receive federal emergency authorizat­ion, the government ordered 300 million doses — enough for 150 million Americans — before issues with the vaccine’s clinical trial held up clearance.

The company said this month it believes it will have roughly 30 million doses available to the U.S. government by the end of March, and an additional 20 million by the end of April.

As foreign regulators have moved ahead with the shot, the U.S. has not dropped its contractua­l claim on the initial doses produced in America.

That policy has also come under criticism from U.S. neighbors Canada and Mexico, which have been forced to seek vaccine manufactur­ed on a different continent, rather than across the border. Meanwhile, the Biden administra­tion has purchased enough doses of Moderna, Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson to inoculate 150 million more people than the U.S. population by the end of the year.

The U.S. has also ordered 110 million doses of vaccine from Novavax, which is expected to file for emergency authorizat­ion as soon as next month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States