Italy has blocked a shipment of COVID-19 vaccines for Australia as the EU escalates its row with AstraZeneca
- The EU has blocked a shipment of COVID-19 vaccines bound for Australia.
- Officials confirmed to Insider that Italy decided to block the export of 250,000 AstraZeneca vaccines made in the country.
- Rome used EU powers introduced last month to limit the export of vaccines amid supply concerns.
- Visit the Business section of Insider for more stories.
Italy has blocked a shipment of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine which was bound for Australia, in the first use of emergency powers the EU introduced last month to limit the export of vaccines amid concerns about their supply.
European officials confirmed to Insider that Italy last week decided to block the export of 250,000 AstraZeneca vaccines made in the country in a bid to shore up the EU's own supplies of the vaccine.
Most European member states have struggled to launch effective vaccination campaigns and have fallen well behind the UK and the US in terms of vaccination rates.
Rome used powers introduced under the European Commission's newly introduced vaccine exports authorization mechanism.
Mario Draghi, Italy's new prime minister, has taken a tough line on Italy's vaccination efforts, asking fellow EU leaders last month why the bloc was not imposing stricter measures on vaccine exports, the Financial Times reported.
The European Commission introduced the controversial vaccine export mechanism last month amid a row with AstraZeneca and the UK government over vaccine supply shortages.
European officials appeared to suspect that the British-headquartered drugs firm may have been diverting some of its EU-made vaccine supplies to the UK, which it said would have represented a breach of contract.
Under the scheme, member states to block the export of domestically made vaccines that are bound for other counties.
The Commission had the right to veto Italy's decision if it disagreed with it but declined to, EU officials confirmed to Insider. The Financial Times reported that Italy notified Brussels of its decision last week.
The move risks significantly increasing already fraught global tensions around coronavirus vaccine supplies.
The International Chamber of Commerce last month warned that the EU's introduction of vaccine export controls could have "devastating implications" on the global supply of vaccines in a letter seen by Business Insider.
They said that any move to limit vaccine exports from the EU risked retaliatory measures from countries that could damage global vaccination efforts.
"As you will be aware, vaccine supply chains are inherently global in nature - indeed, some inputs required for approved COVID-19 vaccinations can only be sourced in a handful of countries," wrote John Denton, Secretary General of the ICC, in a letter to the Commission.
"In this context, our immediate fear is that the proposed EU export controls risk triggering retaliatory actions by third countries that could very rapidly erode essential supply chains.
from Business Insider https://ift.tt/3e8NJqB
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