Coronavirus UK: Vaccine hold-up ’caused by AstraZeneca delivery delay from Indian factory’
‘We over-promised again’: Matt Hancock faces Tory backlash as he FINALLY admits that India IS behind jabs delay with four million AstraZeneca doses held back by Delhi in ‘act of vaccine nationalism’ – dealing serious blow to UK’s rollout
- Serum Institute of India has been told it must supply its own citizens before exporting vaccines
- One batch of five million doses of the AstraZeneca jab bound for the UK has been delayed by a month
- Ministers insist the UK is ‘still on track’ to hit April and July targets, and people due a second dose will get one
- But hiccup means plans to expand jabs to under-50s have been put on ice until May at the earliest
Tories lashed out at ministers for ‘overpromising’ on the vaccine rollout today after Matt Hancock finally admitted a delayed shipment from India is behind a shortage set to hit the UK.
Frustrated MPs said the government had got ‘carried away’ talking up an impending surge in supplies, with the Health Secretary having hailed the prospect of ‘bumper’ numbers of Britons being jabbed. Hopes of the scheme being extended to under-50s before May now seem to have evaporated.
Following 24 hours of ducking and diving, Mr Hancock finally clarified the source of the problems is India, amid anger that the authorities appear to be following the EU’s lead in undermining legal contracts.
The UK was expecting another 5million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine from the Serum Institute of India, the world’s biggest vaccine manufacturer – completing its order for 10million jabs – but the ‘scheduled’ delivery has been pushed back.
Narendra Modi’s government in New Delhi is in control of exports and blocked the shipment, the Serum Institute’s CEO Adar Poonawalla said, to keep them for their own citizens with the country facing the prospect of a second wave. Mr Poonawalla said the company has committed only to helping the UK ‘as and when it can’.
Last month Mr Poonawalla asked other countries to ‘be patient’ and said it had been asked to ‘prioritise the huge needs of India’ and poorer nations.
Coronavirus cases in India are currently at about a third of their peak 2020 levels and the foreign minister said in parliament this week that ‘adequate availability at home’ was top of its priority list, the Financial Times reported.
Mr Hancock — who last night dodged questions about the source of the shortage at a shambolic briefing and insisted the NHS had only issued a ‘technical’ letter — told the House of Commons today: ‘We have a delay in the scheduled arrival from the Serum Institute of India.’
He also revealed that a further batch of 1.7million doses has been held up because experts need to ‘re-test its stability’, although he did not say which vaccines this affected, nor when the delay happened or how long it will be.
One former minister told MailOnline that Mr Hancock should have realised that problems would occur. ‘We should always underpromise in the anticipation of ‘events, events”,’ the MP said.
‘The early success has unfortunately made people get carried away. Had they not overpromised there would not be an issue because the public would have been delighted with what has been achieved.
‘The over-hyping opens up the government to criticism which it could have avoided.’
Whitehall insiders have denied India purposely delayed the shipment in response to British criticism of allegations of Mr Modi’s Government using force on farmers staging peaceful protests over proposed plans that workers fear would hurt their incomes.
Panic about the UK’s lockdown plans erupted last night when NHS officials wrote a letter to vaccine teams saying there would be a ‘significant reduction’ in supplies and they must all but stop giving out first doses next month.
In the UK, a bump in AstraZeneca’s vaccine was set to give ministers room to continue the roll-out and move onto jabbing 40-somethings, with pre-ordered supplies of AZ and Pfizer’s jabs reserved for second doses. But the NHS is now not expecting to have any jabs to dish out to first-timers, stalling the rollout that has reached a massive 25million people already.
A member of the UK’s vaccine advisory group the JCVI, Professor Adam Finn, suggested the roadmap could be impacted by the hold-up. He said on Radio 4: ‘The next phase – phase two – may kick off slightly later than we’d optimistically hoped.’
Ministers have been desperate to reassure people this won’t happen, however. Mr Hancock last night insisted the UK remains on track to hit its target of getting at least one dose to all adults who want one by the end of July.
And Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick said on Sky News today: ‘This isn’t anything that people should be worried about. We are still on course to meet our targets… Nobody who has an appointment should be concerned, you are still going to get your second vaccine, all those appointments will be honoured.’
Health Secretary Matt Hancock today confirmed India delayed a ‘scheduled’ UK delivery of the AstraZeneca vaccine. Boris Johnson will hold a press conference at Downing Street today from 5pm (pictured, the PM on a visit to his constituency)
Although the Serum Institute agreed to supply 10million doses of vaccine to the UK, Britain gets most of its AstraZeneca supplies from factories within the country. Most manufacturing is done in Keele and Oxford, with the finishing process completed in Wrexham in North Wales
Supply figures for the vaccines were always expected to dip in April and May, according to projections published by the Scottish Government in January — before the UK had struck a deal for 10million doses from India. Therefore, the India delivery delay is believed to be separate from these figures
The Serum Institute of India’s CEO, Adar Poonawalla, is pictured with No10’s International Trade Secretary Liz Truss in February, before news emerged of the deal that it would supply the UK with 10million doses of AstraZeneca’s vaccine
The disruption to the UK’s Covid vaccine supply is said to be caused by a delay to a delivery from the Serum Institute of India, the world’s biggest vaccine-maker, which is producing some of Britain’s supply of the Oxford/AstraZeneca jab
The role New Delhi has played in this specific shipment delay remains unclear but coronavirus cases in the country are surging towards a second wave – currently at about a third of their peak 2020 levels – and the foreign minister said in parliament this week that ‘adequate availability at home’ was top of the list, the Financial Times reported
The shortage came as Brussels issued a string of extraordinary threats to grab ‘Europe’s fair share’ of vaccines from Britain.
Whitehall sources were adamant, however, that any disruption to the UK’s supply had nothing to do with the EU row.
EU leaders are poised to perform another vaccine U-turn today when safety experts who have backed the AstraZeneca product deliver their final verdict on the jab, after more than a dozen countries suspended shots over sporadic reports of blood clots.
Britain’s drug regulator today revealed it has received five reports of a specific brain blood clot in people who had had the AstraZeneca vaccine — but cautioned that no causal link has been found and there is no evidence blood clots are occurring more often than expected.
The MHRA insisted the benefits outweigh any risks and the public should continue to get their vaccine when invited to do so.
The vaccine rollout was plunged into its first real crisis last night as the NHS revealed a major four-week fall in supply – though there is confusion over the source of the shortage.
In a bombshell development, a leaked letter suggested that the NHS is expecting a ‘significant reduction’ in supply for four weeks from March 29. The letter said local vaccination centres have been told to close unfilled bookings from the end of this month – with the ‘constraint’ expected to last throughout April.
It would mean millions of people under 50 would now have to wait until May for their first vaccine appointment, much later than many had hoped.
There was initial confusion over the source of the delay with a Government source blaming a range of ‘production issues’ but not naming the manufacturer.
AstraZeneca has denied it is at fault, insisting that the domestic supply chain in the UK is not experiencing disruption.
Mr Hancock confirmed in the Commons today that it was in fact the Serum Institute, manufacturing Oxford and AstraZeneca’s vaccine, that was partly behind the delay.
He said: ‘We have a delay in the scheduled arrival from the Serum Institute of India.
‘Now, I want to put on the record my gratitude to the Serum Institute of India for the incredible work that they’re doing producing vaccine not just for us in the UK, but for the whole world.
‘Their technology and their capability, which has been approved by the MHRA, is remarkable. The Serum Institute of India producing a billion doses of the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine this year, it truly is partnership that we can be proud of.’
The company has been open about the fact that its top priorities are supplying Covid vaccines to India’s own one billion citizens and then to a programme that sends life-saving jabs to poor countries with bad healthcare.
The CEO, Mr Poonawalla, said in a tweet in February: ‘I humbly request you to be patient’.
In an interview with The Telegraph today Mr Poonawalla hit back against attempts to shift the blame for a hiccup in Britain’s rollout onto the Institute.
He said: ‘There is no stipulated contract period and time in which I am supposed to deliver these doses. I am helping as I can and when I can AstraZeneca and UK to supply these doses.’
Mr Poonawalla denied that there was a shortage of the vaccine or that there was ever a commitment to supply the UK on a deadline, and said the firm had already sent five million doses to Britain.
He added: ‘The balance doses will be decided to be given to the UK at an appropriate time by the Indian Government. While balancing India and all its needs at the same time…And of course, don’t forget we are primarily supplying the CoVax to poorer nations as they are the ones who have not got the doses.’
Tory MP Peter Bone told MailOnline that examples of vaccine nationalism were ‘disappointing’.
He said: ‘The UK pretty much led the world on vaccine research and putting money into projects which have now turned into vaccines but we put considerable amounts of money on faith, the risk, and we ordered the vaccines as part of that process and they should be delivered because that is what they are contracted to do so I would be very surprised if any government tried to interfere with that process.’
He added: ‘I would be very disappointed if any government suddenly decided that they were, for national reasons, they were going to interfere with commercial contracts that were entered into, especially as the UK put money up front to help develop these vaccines.’
Another Tory MP said: ‘It is a very dangerous precedent to set. Governments have a duty to their populations to make sure their procurement works properly.
‘If governments don’t really put in place the right procurement arrangements they can hardly bleat about it if companies then deliver orders in the order they were placed.’
An AstraZeneca spokesman said: ‘Our UK domestic supply chain is not experiencing any disruption and there is no impact on our delivery schedule.’
The two operations are separate and AstraZeneca does not control the Serum Institute’s production nor pay it to carry it out, it simply provides the blueprint for making the doses as part of a licensing agreement for the common good.
Although the Serum Institute agreed to supply 10million doses of vaccine to the UK, Britain gets most of its AstraZeneca supplies from factories within the country.
Most manufacturing is done in Keele and Oxford, with the finishing process completed in Wrexham in North Wales.
Some doses were imported from a facility in Leiden, Netherlands, at the very beginning of the rollout, but the company vowed to become self-sufficient within the UK after that.
There are also suggestions of manufacturing issues with the Moderna and Johnson and Johnson vaccines, according to sources.
News of the shortage came as Brussels issued a string of extraordinary threats to grab ‘Europe’s fair share’ of vaccines from Britain.
Whitehall sources were adamant, however, that any disruption to the UK’s supply had nothing to do with the EU row. ‘We are not giving supplies away and AstraZeneca are not redirecting our supplies to the continent,’ the source said.
With conflicting accounts from No10 and AstraZeneca, the source of the delay remains unclear.
But ministers are adamant that plans to get the UK out of lockdown won’t be hampered by the chaos, saying the NHS is still on schedule to reach all the top priority groups by mid-April and all adults by the end of July.
Robert Jenrick said on Sky News today: ‘We do think there are going to be some supply issues in the weeks ahead but this isn’t anything that people should be worried about.
‘We are still on course to meet our targets – that’s to vaccinate all of the groups one to nine by the middle of April and all adults to receive their first vaccine by the end of July.
‘Nobody who has an appointment should be concerned, you are still going to get your second vaccine; all those appointments will be honoured.
‘But we always said, right from the beginning, a new manufacturing process would have its lumps and bumps and that has been the case in the past and I am sure it will be in the future.’
The news immediately triggered fears that the NHS could miss its vaccine targets, forcing ministers to delay the release from lockdown and slowdown Boris Johnson’s timetable for a return to normality.
Downing Street insisted that any potential shortages would not derail Mr Johnson’s roadmap for easing the lockdown.
A senior Government source said: ‘It doesn’t stop us hitting our vaccination targets and there’s no reason it should have any impact on the roadmap.’
Health Secretary Matt Hancock told a Downing Street press conference that vaccine supply was ‘always lumpy’ and insisted the nation was on track to meet the target of offering a first dose to all over-50s by April 15.
Data suggests Covid deaths recorded during the second wave are falling faster than in the first as the vaccines take effect
But Labour’s shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth urged Mr Hancock to explain what these supply issues were and how the Government was aiming to resolve them.
‘Trying to dismiss or downplay the legitimate concerns of anxious people waiting for a vaccine is simply not good enough,’ Mr Ashworth added.
A Pfizer spokeswoman said deliveries of its vaccine ‘remain on track’ for the first quarter of its 40million-dose agreement with the UK, with a ‘steady supply of vaccines’ delivered to the nation.
Asked about the letter, Mr Hancock said: ‘Supply is always lumpy and we are on course to deliver the offer that everybody who is aged 50 and above will be able to get vaccinated by the 15th of April. I recommit to that today.
‘And, of course, these supply schedules have moved up and down throughout this whole rollout. It’s absolutely par for the course and that’s a normal operation letter.
‘We are committed to all adults being able to get the jab by the end of July and we are on track to deliver on that commitment.’
Meanwhile, a Department of Health source insisted that ministers still expected the vaccination of the under-50s to begin at some point next month, despite yesterday’s NHS letter appearing to rule it out. ‘We will still be able to do people in their forties in April,’ the source said.
Officials are also expecting the US-made Moderna vaccine to come on stream from the start of next month, with enough jabs to vaccinated 2.5million people.
And the NHS insisted the shortage was nothing to do with the Vaccines Taskforce which has been coordinating the inoculation drive. A source said: ‘The Vaccines Taskforce has done a fantastic job for this country in sourcing vaccine supplies and we are all the beneficiaries of it.’
But some experts warned that the potential disruption was a serious issue and the repercussions could last for months.
Dr Simon Clarke, associate professor in cellular microbiology at the University of Reading, said: ‘It’s to be expected that supply… will be variable, but to delay vaccination for the under-50s by a month is more than a bump in the road. To pretend that everyone at risk has been vaccinated is misleading.
The MHRA said an estimated 10.7million first doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine had been dished out by February 28, compared to 9.7million of the Oxford-AstraZeneca jab. If the same 54/46 per cent split is still being used, it would suggest the Pfizer figure now stands at 13.6million
Ursula von der Leyen has told Britain to hand over doses of AstraZeneca vaccine or else risk seeing jab exports from the continent blocked, despite the fact that most of Europe has halted its use
The vaccine effect on catching Covid: The Pfizer (left) and Oxford (right) jabs slash the chance of getting infected in over-70s by 60 per cent after a single dose
The Serum Institute hit back against claims it would be behind a slowdown in the UK’s vaccine programme and issued a reminder that it is providing for its home country’s one billion citizens (pictured: a woman receives a jab in Mumbai) as well as for millions of people in poor countries around the world
‘During the pandemic, more men in their 40s were admitted to intensive care units than men and women over 85 and the Government were clearly expecting to proceed at pace with the vaccinations, otherwise they wouldn’t need to stop appointments being made in April.
‘We don’t yet know exactly why the delay has occurred, but the ripple effects could last for months. It will undoubtedly make the meeting of the target dates for lifting restrictions more difficult than they otherwise would have been.’
Some 141 new deaths from Covid were reported yesterday and 5,758 cases. At a Downing Street press conference last night, Health Secretary Matt Hancock tried to downplay fears, stating that vaccine supplies were ‘always lumpy’ and that supply schedules changing were ‘absolutely par for the course’.
Signed by Dr Nikita Kanani, medical director for primary care for the NHS in England, and Emily Lawson, chief commercial officer, the letter of warning urges vaccinations to be focused on the top priority groups while supplies are low.
Addressed to local health organisations, it said: ‘The Government’s Vaccines Taskforce have now notified us that there will be a significant reduction in weekly supply available from manufacturers beginning in the week commencing March 29, meaning volumes for first doses will be significantly constrained.
‘They now currently predict this will continue for a four-week period, as a result of reductions in national inbound vaccines supply.’ Staff working in vaccination centres may need to be deployed to try and increase uptake among hard-to-reach groups, it suggests, such as pop-up centres at mosques and other community settings.
Jabs should not be offered to anyone outside the top nine priority groups during that time period, unless under ‘exceptional circumstances’.
It adds: ‘Those aged 49 years or younger should not be offered vaccination unless they are eligible via a higher cohort because they are… clinically vulnerable, unpaid carer or frontline health and care workers.’ Ministers have pledged that all adults will be offered a vaccine by the end of July, with Mr Hancock defiantly vowing this will still be the case.
But the news is likely to end any hopes that restrictions could be eased ahead of schedule, given the success of the rollout so far.
After a surge in supply this week, experts had forecast it would be followed by a dip with the number of doses available likely to drop below two million a week next month.
Health officials stressed the vaccine rollout ‘relies on a biological process which doesn’t always go smoothly’ with any blip potentially destroying a batch containing a million doses. Meanwhile, rising numbers of patients needing their second dose at 12 weeks will reduce how many can be offered a first vaccine.
Deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van-Tam said it was right for the focus to remain on over-50s. He said: ‘It’s important we get that done properly before we move on to phase two, because phase one is where the patients are who suffer the mortality.’
The Department of Health and Social Care said: ‘As has been the case since the programme began, the number of vaccinations carried out over time will vary due to supply – but we remain on track to offer a first vaccine to over 50s by April 15 and all adults by July 31.’
In other vaccine news, the EU’s shambolic vaccine rollout also descended deeper into chaos as a rattled Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the bloc, complained it is sending millions of doses to other countries while receiving few in return —warning of action to ensure ‘reciprocity’.
She called on Britain to begin sending AstraZeneca jabs overseas and lashed out at the drug-maker for ‘under-producing and under-delivering’ doses, saying it is to blame for the slow place of Europe’s roll-out.
That is despite the fact that a dozen European countries, including France, Germany, Italy and Spain, have halted the use of AstraZeneca jabs over unfounded fears they cause blood clots, meaning around 7.5million doses are currently sitting unused.
England’s deputy chief medical officer, Professor Jonathan Van-Tam, offered a sharp rebuke to European decisions not to use the jab, saying: ‘Vaccines don’t save lives if they’re in fridges. They only save lives if they’re in arms, and that’s a really important fact.’