The Borneo Post

EU watchdog tries again on Moderna vaccine

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THE HAGUE: The EU’s drug regulator met for the second time this week on Wednesday to discuss whether to authorise Moderna’s coronaviru­s jab as criticism mounts of the bloc’s slow vaccine rollout.

The approval of a second vaccine after Pfizer-BioNTech’s got the green light in December would be a shot in the arm for Europe, which is lagging behind the United States, Britain and Israel.

The Amsterdam-based European Medicines Agency brought forward an initial meeting on Moderna’s vaccine to Monday but it proved inconclusi­ve, with the EMA calling for more informatio­n.

“The meeting of EMA’s human medicines committee to discuss Covid-19 vaccine Moderna has started.

“We will communicat­e the outcome,” the EMA said on Twitter on Wednesday.

The agency said Tuesday that “our experts are working hard to clarify all outstandin­g issues with the company”.

European Council chief Charles Michel said on Tuesday that the bloc could authorise its second vaccine “in the coming hours”, adding that leaders would hold a virtual summit on the health crisis later this month.

“Even if it’s not certain, we hope that in the coming hours a second vaccine will be agreed on,” Michel told a Lisbon press conference to mark Portugal taking over the rotating EU presidency.

Michel said that delivering vaccines to the EU’s almost 450 million people was a “gigantic challenge”.

But he insisted that “alongside member states, the European Commission is working night and day to make sure we can increase the number of vaccines available” – while “respecting the independen­ce of the medicines agency”.

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