The European Union has kicked off legal proceedings against the Swedish-British pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca citing its failure to deliver on an agreed upon contract to deliver vaccines to EU countries, the European Commission said in a statement.
“The reason indeed being that the terms of the contract or some terms of the contract have not been respected and the company has not been in the position to come up with a reliable strategy to ensure timely delivery of doses”, Stefan De Keersmaecker, a spokesman for the European Commission, said on Monday.
AstraZeneca shortly struck back, claiming it had fully complied with the advance purchase deal with the European Commission, and adding it was set to strongly defend itself in court.
Earlier, a diplomatic source was cited by the media as saying that the move was closely linked to the EU’s intention to ensure that all the projected deliveries take place in the second quarter of this year.
“EU states have to decide if they participate. It is about the fulfillment of deliveries by the end of the second quarter”, the person said.
In March, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen expressed disappointment with AstraZeneca during a press conference, saying that “AstraZeneca has unfortunately under-produced and under-delivered. And this painfully, of course, reduced the speed of the vaccination campaign”.
The comments came just months after the firm first announced that it would be unable to deliver all of the 300 million doses it had initially vowed to supply the bloc with in the first quarter of the year in line with its contractual obligations. It cited technical complications at its Belgian facility, with the rhetoric prompting the EU to call the firm to more actively supply the jabs manufactured at its Britain-based plants – something AstraZeneca rejected calling the contract with the UK “a separate one”.
Source: Sputnik