By Francesco Guarascio
BRUSSELS, May 10 (Reuters) - AstraZeneca Plc has
delivered 50 million doses of its COVID-19 vaccine to European
Union countries, according to EU's latest supply data, a
milestone it was originally due to hit in January.
Repeated cuts to supplies, which contributed to delays in
the EU's vaccination drive, pushed the European executive
commission to sue the Anglo-Swedish drugmaker in late April in a
bid to get more doses by mid-year.
AstraZeneca had shipped nearly 50 million doses as of May 7,
an EU official told Reuters on Monday, citing the latest EU
internal figures on vaccine supplies.
In mid-March, the company had pledged to deliver 50.2
million doses to the EU by the end of April, an AstraZeneca
document seen by Reuters shows.
But AstraZeneca had shipped only 47.6 million doses by the
evening of April 30, a spokesman for the company said, adding
that other doses were sent over the first weekend of May and in
the following days "following requests to not ship to a few
countries that had public holidays during this period".
Immediately after the EU sued the company, AstraZeneca
issued a statement on April 26 saying it would deliver "almost
50 million doses to European countries by the end of April".
Under its contract with the EU, the company had committed to
its "best reasonable efforts" to deliver 300 million doses by
the end of June, of which 70 million were supposed to be
delivered by the end of January.
Citing production problems and export restrictions,
AstraZeneca in March said it would deliver to the EU only 100
million doses by the end of June. It delivered 30 million in
total by the end of March.
The vaccine was approved for use in the EU in late January,
but the EU Commission has said AstraZeneca should have applied
earlier.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; Editing by Bill Berkrot)