EU Commission takes AstraZeneca to court for vaccine contract breach
EU Commission takes AstraZeneca to court for
vaccine contract breach
The European Commission has started legal action against
British-Swedish pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca due to breaches of its
COVID-19 vaccine supply contract.
The EU executive branch began the process on Friday because some terms
of the contract have not been respected, commission spokesperson Stefan De
Keersmaecker said on Monday. Furthermore, “the company has not been in a
position to come up with a reliable strategy to ensure the timely delivery of
doses,’’ the spokesperson told reporters in Brussels. “We want to make sure
that there is a speedy delivery of a sufficient number of doses that European
citizens are entitled to, and which have been promised on the basis of the
contract,’’ he added. The 27 EU member states support the move, according to De
Keersmaecker. The case is to be heard in Belgian courts.
After repeatedly revising downward the amount of doses it was expected
to deliver, AstraZeneca is now aiming to deliver 70 million doses in the second
quarter of the year, according to the EU executive. This is significantly
less than the 180 million the commission says the company was aiming to deliver
in that period, with the entire contract covering 300 million doses. According
to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control’s vaccine
tracker, only 31 million doses have been distributed to the European Union and
European Economic Area since deliveries began. The row about delivery
shortfalls has been running since January, when AstraZeneca announced
production hiccups were affecting their EU supply chain. Brussels was
particularly frustrated that neighbouring Britain’s supply of AstraZeneca shots
remained unaffected, in spite of purchase contracts dating from August 2020.
The bloc even halted the export of 250,000 of the company’s vaccine doses from Italy
to Australia, arguing it must first honour its contractual obligations to the
European Union. As a first step, the EU executive branch launched a
dispute resolution process with AstraZeneca in March.
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