Secured nearly half of Pfizer 2021 global output of COVID-19 shots, says EU
Brussels: The European Union reached a deal with Pfizer and BioNTech for 300 million additional doses of their COVID-19 vaccine, the head of the European Commission said on Friday, in a move that would give the EU nearly half of the firms' global output for 2021.
Pfizer has said it can produce up to 1.3 billion doses around the world this year. The new agreement with the EU comes on top of another order for 300 million doses of the vaccine, branded in the EU under the name Comirnaty, that the bloc agreed with Pfizer and German partner BioNTech in November.
They cut by half to 50 million doses their production in 2020 after facing some snags in securing supplies of vaccine ingredients.
European officials said the companies were working to expand production capacity in Europe.
Pfizer has agreed to sell the United States up to 600 million doses, of which 200 million have been already ordered. Another 120 million doses are reserved for Japan this year, and 40 million for Britain, among disclosed deals.
Germany said on Monday it had agreed with BioNtech to supply 30 million additional doses in a side deal, although the timing of the delivery was unclear.
The German move, agreed in September but revealed only this week as the government faced pressures at home, appears to be in contrast with EU agreements that forbid members to negotiate parallel deals with vaccine makers.
"No member state on this legal binding basis is allowed to negotiate in parallel or to have a contract in parallel," von der Leyen said. But a Commission spokesman declined to comment on whether the German deal was legal under EU agreements.
The new EU agreement includes a possible immediate order for 200 million doses and an additional option to buy another 100 million, the Commission said.
Doses are usually shared among EU states in proportion to their population, but it was unclear whether all governments would make orders based on the new contract. ($1 = 0.8149 euros)
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