European Union sues AstraZeneca over vaccine shortages
Stella Kyriakides, the European Commissioner for Health and Food Safety, announced Monday that the European Union is suing AstraZeneca for failing to deliver on its coronavirus vaccine contract.
“Our priority is to ensure #COVID19 vaccine deliveries take place to protect the health of [the European Union],” Kyriakides tweeted. “This is why @EU_Commission has decided jointly with all Member States to bring legal proceedings against #AstraZeneca. Every vaccine dose counts. Every vaccine dose saves lives.”
Our priority is to ensure #COVID19 vaccine deliveries take place to protect the health of .
This is why @EU_Commission has decided jointly with all Member States to bring legal proceedings against #AstraZeneca.
Every vaccine dose counts. Every vaccine dose saves lives.
— Stella Kyriakides (@SKyriakidesEU) April 26, 2021
AstraZeneca in a statement said it had complied with its contract, rejecting the lawsuit’s allegation.
“Following an unprecedented year of scientific discovery, very complex negotiations, and manufacturing challenges, our company is about to deliver almost 50m doses to European countries by the end of April, in line with our forecast,” AstraZeneca said in a statement provided to CNBC.
“AstraZeneca has fully complied with the Advance Purchase Agreement with the European Commission and will strongly defend itself in court,” the pharmaceutical company added. “We believe any litigation is without merit and we welcome this opportunity to resolve this dispute as soon as possible.”
This lawsuit comes after several months of tense conflicts between the European bloc and AstraZeneca. CNBC notes that AstraZeneca twice announced last year that it would not be delivering the amount of vaccines that the EU was counting on.
These shortfalls have led to stunted vaccine rollouts in the EU’s 27 member countries. Several countries in the EU had paused administration of the AstraZeneca vaccine after concerns were raised that it was linked to blood clots
Denmark, a member country, announced earlier in April that it would be permanently dropping use of the AstraZeneca vaccine.
The EU issued a letter of complaint to AstraZeneca in March after the block received only 30.1 million doses of the 120 million that it had contracted for.
At the time, AstraZeneca said it had held a “positive” meeting with the EU.
“We can confirm we have responded to the Commission within the required time-frame of the dispute resolution mechanism, and that our team had a very collaborative meeting with the Commission last week,” said Matthew Kent, AstraZeneca’s director of global media relations.
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