Merkel will convene crisis talks amid the chaotic EU vaccine deployment

Logistics and vaccine production facilities Covid at the Serum Institute, the world's largest vaccine manufacturer

Photographer: Dhiraj Singh / Bloomberg

Chancellor Angela Merkel will hold crisis talks on Monday with pharmaceutical executives, German regional leaders and European Commission officials to try to speed up the continent’s vaccination push stuttering.

This afternoon’s video call in Berlin comes after the commission’s chairwoman Ursula von der Leyen announced it. AstraZeneca Plc will deliver an additional 9 million doses of vaccine to the European Union during the first quarter. The EU has been locked in a bitter dispute with the drug maker since AstraZeneca said it was reducing the number of shots delivered to the block due to production issues.

Von der Leyen said on Sunday afternoon on Twitter that the Anglo-Swedish pharmacist would begin deliveries a week ahead of schedule and expand manufacturing. The additional doses would bring the total to 40 million, just about half of what the EU had expected from Astra by March.

Separately, Pfizer Inc. i BioNTech SE said Monday that, as noted above, it will produce another 75 million doses of its vaccine for the EU in the second quarter. The two companies are “returning to the original vaccine dose delivery schedule” in the EU following modifications to a facility in Puurs, Belgium, BioNTech said.

“We are now in talks with additional qualified partners on possible new agreements” to further increase the capacity of our European manufacturing network, said Sierk Poetting, chief financial officer of BioNTech, in an emailed statement.

The EU is chasing the vaccine race

Accumulated doses administered per 100 people

Source: Data collected by Bloomberg


Read more: In the face of a vaccine emergency, the EU became an enemy of everyone

AstraZeneca sparked a crisis on January 22 when it said problems at a plant in Belgium would mean that deliveries to the EU would be significantly reduced this quarter. As a result, the block, which came under fire due to the slow development of national vaccination programs, said it would begin restricting the export of vaccines if drug manufacturers do not meet delivery targets.

.Source