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France says 'highly probable' EU won't renew AstraZenaca vaccine contract

France has said it is "highly probable" that the European Union will not renew its Covid-19 vaccine contracts with pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca, according to the minister of industry. 

'Highly probable' the EU won't ask for a refill
'Highly probable' the EU won't ask for a refill Amir MAKAR AFP
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Denmark this week banned the use of AstraZeneca jabs over blood clot concerns, just as the EU said it was expecting 50 million Pfizer vaccine doses earlier than expected.

No final EU decision had been taken, French Industry Minister Agnes Pannier-Runacher told RMC radio, but "it is highly probable" that no further AstraZeneca doses would be ordered.

The prediction comes after US drugmaker Johnson & Johnson said it would delay its European rollout, also over blood clot fears -- a major hit for the continent's beleaguered immunisation campaign as several countries battle rising caseloads.

"We have not started talks with Johnson & Johnson or with AstraZeneca for a new contract, but we have started talks with Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna," Pannier-Runacher said.

The J&J and AstraZeneca setbacks are dampening hopes that mass immunisations will allow a swift exit from a pandemic that has killed close to three million people and ravaged the global economy.

Meanwhile, 50 million BioNTech/Pfizer doses that were due to arrive in Europe only at the end of 2021 have been brought forward for delivery as soon as this month.

Denmark said Wednesday it would stop using the AstraZeneca vaccine altogether -- a European first -- despite assurances from the EMA and the World Health Organization that the benefits far outweigh possible risks.

(AFP)

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