Vaccine alliance announces supply delays from manufacturer in India

25 March 2021, 17:34

A vial of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine (Admir Buljubasic/AP)
Virus Outbreak AstraZeneca. Picture: PA

The delays come as India is facing a surge of coronavirus infections.

The UN-backed programme to ship Covid-19 vaccines worldwide has announced supply delays for up to 90 million doses from an Indian manufacturer, in a major setback for the ambitious rollout aimed to help low- and middle-income countries fight the pandemic.

Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, said on Thursday that the delays come as India is facing a surge of coronavirus infections that will increase domestic demands on the Serum Institute of India, a pivotal vaccine maker behind the Covax programme.

“Delays in securing supplies of SII-produced Covid-19 vaccine doses are due to the increased demand for Covid-19 vaccines in India,” Gavi said.

The move will affect up to 40 million doses of the Oxford University-AstraZeneca vaccines being manufactured by the Serum Institute that were to be delivered for Covax this month, as well as 50 million expected next month.

Health workers wait to conduct Covid-19 tests on passengers coming by long distance trains at Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus in Mumbai, India (Rajanish Kakade/AP)
Health workers wait to conduct Covid-19 tests on passengers coming by long distance trains at Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus in Mumbai, India (Rajanish Kakade/AP)

Gavi said it has notified recipient countries.

The institute has been contracted to supply vaccines to 64 countries, and Gavi said the UN-backed programme has “notified all affected economies of potential delays”.

Gavi said the Serum institute has pledged that “alongside supplying India, it will prioritise the Covax multilateral solution for equitable distribution”.

Gavi, which runs Covax jointly with the World Health Organisation and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, has already distributed 31 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, 28 million from the Serum Institute and another three million from a South Korean contractor also producing the vaccine.

The programme had been aiming to deliver some 237 million AstraZeneca vaccines through the end of May.

People wearing masks as a precaution against coronavirus wait to board buses in the morning in Kochi, Kerala state, India RS Iyer/AP)
People wearing masks as a precaution against coronavirus wait to board buses in the morning in Kochi, Kerala state, India RS Iyer/AP)

A Gavi spokesman said the delays were not expected to affect the goal of shipping some two billion doses worldwide through Covax by the end of the year.

Covax has so far shipped vaccines to some 50 countries and territories.

UN officials, governments, advocacy groups and others have pleaded with manufacturers to do more to speed up and widen production of Covid-19 vaccines and ensure fair distribution — insisting that the pandemic can only be defeated if everyone is safe from it.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Police behind police tape in a snowy street in Slovkia

Student held in Slovakia after two people fatally stabbed at high school

Conan O’Brien

Conan O’Brien to receive Mark Twain Prize for lifetime achievement in comedy

US astronaut Suni Williams works outside the International Space Station during a spacewalk

Nasa’s stuck astronaut steps out on spacewalk after seven months in orbit

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol outside the Corruption Investigation Office for High-Ranking Officials in Gwacheon, South Korea

Court upholds detention of impeached South Korean president

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

Netanyahu: No Cabinet meeting until Hamas backs down on ‘last-minute crisis’

Signage at TSMC headquarters in Hsinchu, Taiwan

Taiwanese chipmaker TSMC posts 57% surge in profits thanks to AI boom

Student protesters in Belgrade holding banners

Woman hurt as car ploughs into crowd of anti-government protesters in Serbia

Marine Le Pen

Crowds attend Paris memorial for far-right French leader Jean-Marie Le Pen

Pages from the United Healthcare website are displayed on a computer screen

UnitedHealth books better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit

Vatican Pope Falls

Pope hurts his arm in second fall in a month

A miner is transported on a stretcher by rescue workers

Death toll rises to 87 as stand-off between South African police and miners ends

Russia struck Kyiv with a drone during Sir Keir Starmer's visit

Putin’s forces launch drone attack on Kyiv during Sir Keir Starmer’s visit

BP sign outside a petrol station.

BP to cut 4,700 jobs in fresh wave of cost-cutting measures

Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket lifting off from Launch Complex 36 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station

Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin launches new rocket on first test flight

Man's hands on a laptop keyboard

Biden executive order aims to shore up US cyber defences

South Korea Martial Law

Lawyers say detained South Korean president will refuse further questioning