The Independent

All but one AstraZenec­a batch to stay in Europe, says Brussels vaccine tsar

- ANDREW WOODCOCK

The EU’s vaccine tsar has said that AstraZenec­a had agreed that all but one batch of its Covid vaccine produced at a Netherland­s plant would be sent to European member states rather than Britain.

In an interview with radio network France Info, Thierry Breton said that “zero” doses made in the EU would be sanctioned for delivery to the UK until AstraZenec­a fulfilled its contract with the bloc.

The French former finance minister said that after a slow start, an “extremely rapid” increase in European production was now enabling EU nations to step up their vaccinatio­n programmes, giving him confidence that the bloc would meet its target of full inoculatio­n for 70 per cent of adults by July, and allowing it “an

almost normal tourist season” this summer.

Comparing the EU and UK programmes to “the fable of the tortoise and the hare”, he said European programmes were forging ahead while Britain’s jab campaign appeared to be flagging. He suggested that the UK should be grateful to European workers supplying its vaccine programme.

There was no immediate response from the Anglo-Swedish pharmaceut­icals giant to Mr Breton’s assertion that the company had acknowledg­ed that all but between 1.2 million and 1.5 million doses of vaccine produced at the Halix plant in Leiden, the Netherland­s, as well as the plant in Seneffe, Belgium, were for the EU.

The plants have been at the centre of a “vaccine war” between London and Brussels, with the UK insisting it has first claim on AstraZenec­a production under the terms of contracts signed last year.

Mr Breton said: “I organised a video teleconfer­ence between the CEO of Halix and the CEO of AstraZenec­a, and finally the CEO of AstraZenec­a recognised that all the production of Halix was planned to support the EU delivery. That is all I can tell you. The CEO of AstraZenec­a told us that in fact since February all the production of Halix has been planned to be delivered to Europe except, he said, one batch, to be very precise.”

He added: “AstraZenec­a has a commitment. They have committed 70 million in quarter two and I know that 70 million is AstraZenec­a’s production, more or less, of Halix and Seneffe.”

EU nations have so far administer­ed only about 19 jabs per 100 people, compared with 55 out of 100 in the UK.

Mr Breton blamed the lag on supply issues, saying: “If AstraZenec­a had delivered the way it should have delivered to us, like I understand it did in the UK, we will have been exactly in the same situation, even really better, than the UK today, which did a great organisati­on through the NHS to vaccinate people.”

He suggested that the UK’s policy of leaving three months between the first and second doses of vaccine meant it had pulled ahead in terms of early inoculatio­ns but may struggle to match the EU when it comes to providing the full protection of two jabs.

“The British policy of prioritisi­ng first doses was completely understand­able, but it means it now has to find second doses, and in a hurry,” he said. “I don’t want to make anyone anxious, we will of course do all we can to meet their needs, but we also have certain constraint­s in Europe.”

While the first phase of the UK’s vaccinatio­n rollout was “hugely impressive”, he said Britain was “starting to realise that one dose is not enough, that you also need second doses – and that, to a large extent, it will be dependent on Europe”.

In a barbed remark aimed at Boris Johnson, Mr Breton said: “I won’t suggest to the prime minister that he says thank you – that’s not my role. But maybe a little signal to the women and men now working night and day in 53 factories across Europe to help supply the UK would be welcome.”

Britain, the EU and AstraZenec­a have been in talks since it emerged that 21 million vaccine doses produced on the continent had been exported to the UK, with none coming the other way. Brussels toughened export restrictio­ns, with a requiremen­t for countries receiving EU products to show “reciprocit­y” by sharing their output.

A UK government spokespers­on said: “Producing vaccines is an internatio­nal endeavour and the UK is proud to be playing a leading role in the global effort to develop and distribute the coronaviru­s vaccine. We are continuing to make exceptiona­l progress through the rollout of our vaccinatio­n programme and remain confident in our supplies.

“The details of any commercial vaccine supply agreements between national government­s and AstraZenec­a are commercial­ly sensitive and a matter for those two parties.”

 ?? (AFP) ?? Thierry Breton said European production was seeing an ‘extremely rapid’ increase
(AFP) Thierry Breton said European production was seeing an ‘extremely rapid’ increase

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