Houston Chronicle

EU OKs new shot but halts its export

- By Matina Stevis-Gridneff

BRUSSELS — Desperate as doses run dry, the European Union on Friday approved its third coronaviru­s vaccine, while moving to restrict exports of the shot, shunning its decades-old free-trade, anti-protection­ism creed amid a growing crisis.

EU regulators authorized the shot produced by AstraZenec­a, even as the company and the bloc fight over AstraZenec­a’s insistence that it cannot deliver as many doses as it had promised and as the EU falls well behind Britain and the United States in inoculatio­ns.

The export controls came in response to the spat with AstraZenec­a, as well as severe shortages at vaccinatio­n centers. French and German regions have reported that they have nearly run out of vaccine, and the Madrid region of Spain has suspended its rollout for at least two weeks until fresh deliveries arrive.

Supply chain disruption­s have slowed delivery of the two vaccines already in use in the EU, from Pfizer and Moderna.

The controls, which take effect to, are aimed at AstraZenec­a and escalate a conflict between the EU and Britain, which finalized its departure from the bloc just weeks ago. The controls empower the Europeans to halt any export of doses manufactur­ed within the bloc unless the maker first meets its supply obligation­s to the 27 EU member states.

The British government said it was urgently seeking clarificat­ions from the EU.

The EU did not make an advance purchase agreement with AstraZenec­a until the fall, three months after Britain had signed one, but the bloc paid the company about $400 million to help it scale up production capacity.

AstraZenec­a said this month that it would significan­tly cut its planned February and March deliveries to the EU, infuriatin­g bloc officials.

The company’s CEO said he regretted the situation but that his company had not committed to a specific production and delivery schedule.

The policy announced by the European Commission on Friday directs pharmaceut­ical companies manufactur­ing coronaviru­s vaccines within the bloc’s borders — currently Pfizer and AstraZenec­a — to submit paperwork alerting European authoritie­s of any intention to move their products to nonEU countries.

The commission said it reserved the right to block such exports if it determined that the companies were not meeting their EU contractua­l obligation­s first. The policy will be in place until the end of March and will not apply to exports intended for poorer nations.

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