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  1. #2641
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    Quote Originally Posted by RandBlade View Post
    Oh the EU's AZN vaccine contract is even with a different company than the UK's too.

    EU have signed with AZN AB, the UK have signed with AZN plc. Same family of companies but they're separate companies.

    The idea the EU can just nick doses made for the UK contract signed months earlier to make up for their own shortfall is absolutely crass and absurd.
    We will see. Usually the winner in these matters is the one with the bigger stick. AZN shouldn't have picked this fight.

    I'm not going to read the contract, but what I read about it seems to indicate that the best effort clause has lost most of its relevance at this point. IF Belgian law applies AZN then things would look very bleak if the shortfall is caused by exports.

    From the latest reports it seems that AZN has already started folding.
    Last edited by Hazir; 01-29-2021 at 04:54 PM.
    Congratulations America

  2. #2642
    AZN is the one with the bigger stick.

    They have the vaccine 6 billion people around the globe want.

    The shortfall is caused by reduced yields - not by pre-existing prior contracts that took precedence.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  3. #2643
    Quote Originally Posted by RandBlade View Post
    That is not correct. The yield is too low, for the production difficulties to result in such a massive shortfall they must be aware of them when they bcome aware of them. You're acting as if these things are made linearly. If the yield turns out to be too low then it is too low and at that point they're obliged to report to the EU - which they have done.
    Do you believe AZN expected to be able to make and test 80 million doses overnight at the end of last week? In order to ensure that a sufficiently large stock of vaccine is ready to ship, they have to produce and test large quantities of drug substance over a long time, and begin finishing the final product well ahead of the scheduled delivery.

    No that's incorrect. Its entirely possible they're planning to use the EU facilities (FR/BE, I/IL, ITL and DE) but they've included UK facilities too so that they're able to use the UK surplus, if and when one arrives, to supplement the EU facilities.
    If it is only restricted to surplus, it is an impediment to fulfilling the EU order. AZN should therefore not have assured the EU that there were no such impediments. It seems very strange to include two facilities in the list of primary production facilities for the initial EU doses if you only expect to be able to use surplus capacity.

    That doesn't given the EU the right to pinch stocks bought and paid for by someone else three months earlier.
    The fault lies with AZN; how they rectify the situation without stiffing the UK is really their business.

    Quote Originally Posted by RandBlade View Post
    Oh the EU's AZN vaccine contract is even with a different company than the UK's too.

    EU have signed with AZN AB, the UK have signed with AZN plc. Same family of companies but they're separate companies.
    This isn't all that relevant, so long as AZN AB has the authority to make assurances about production capacity at the facilities in question.
    "One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."

  4. #2644
    Is this big news in EU countries like it is in the UK?

  5. #2645
    Quote Originally Posted by gogobongopop View Post
    Is this big news in EU countries like it is in the UK?
    Big in some places, and growing bigger. Obv not in Sweden because no-one here g a f about anything UK media jumped the shark a little, aided by AZN's strategic redactions; cooler heads are speaking up now.
    "One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."

  6. #2646
    Quote Originally Posted by Aimless View Post
    Do you believe AZN expected to be able to make and test 80 million doses overnight at the end of last week? In order to ensure that a sufficiently large stock of vaccine is ready to ship, they have to produce and test large quantities of drug substance over a long time, and begin finishing the final product well ahead of the scheduled delivery.
    No, since 80 million doses weren't scheduled to be ready to ship this week anyway.

    Do I believe they expected to be able to make and test 80 million doses over the next three months by the end of the first quarter? Yes, quite possibly. These things scale quite rapidly - its like exponential growth in cases, a small variant unchecked can cause dramatic changes over time.

    They're warning now that they don't think they can fulfill expected quotas for March - in January. That's giving a couple of months notice, not a week.
    If it is only restricted to surplus, it is an impediment to fulfilling the EU order. AZN should therefore not have assured the EU that there were no such impediments. It seems very strange to include two facilities in the list of primary production facilities for the initial EU doses if you only expect to be able to use surplus capacity.
    Not true, since the scheduled amounts were fulfillable had the yield not been down.
    The fault lies with AZN; how they rectify the situation without stiffing the UK is really their business.
    How they rectify the situation is to use best reasonable efforts to fix the yield issues. Same as Pfizer, Moderna and any other business. All of that happens.
    This isn't all that relevant, so long as AZN AB has the authority to make assurances about production capacity at the facilities in question.
    Absolutely and they have the authority to tell you that there is a problem with the yield that they are using best reasonable efforts to fix but until then there's a reduction in capacity as was explicitly planned to be possible in the contract.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  7. #2647


    Hospitalisations of over 80s coming down faster than other age groups and accelerating. Lockdown and vaccine rollout combining, fingers crossed.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  8. #2648
    Its still a bit crap for a business to not meet their commitments.

    In the vendors I use in my work I'd not be renewing a contract with AZN with their failure to deliver.
    Quote Originally Posted by Steely Glint View Post
    It's actually the original French billion, which is bi-million, which is a million to the power of 2. We adopted the word, and then they changed it, presumably as revenge for Crecy and Agincourt, and then the treasonous Americans adopted the new French usage and spread it all over the world. And now we have to use it.

    And that's Why I'm Voting Leave.

  9. #2649
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    Quote Originally Posted by gogobongopop View Post
    Is this big news in EU countries like it is in the UK?
    I don't know how big it is in the UK, but it seems to be mostly in the German media. Media in NL are preoccupied with the mess that's made of what should have been a vaccination drive. The interesting thing is that you can almost see how the conversation went while they were planning this mess. It's a special Dutch gift: literally plan something to death. In retrospect we'll see that all protocols were followed in the pursuit of failure.
    Congratulations America

  10. #2650
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    Quote Originally Posted by RandBlade View Post
    AZN is the one with the bigger stick.

    They have the vaccine 6 billion people around the globe want.

    The shortfall is caused by reduced yields - not by pre-existing prior contracts that took precedence.
    Haha, so please explain why AZN is folding.
    Congratulations America

  11. #2651
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    Quote Originally Posted by Timbuk2 View Post
    Its still a bit crap for a business to not meet their commitments.

    In the vendors I use in my work I'd not be renewing a contract with AZN with their failure to deliver.
    Indeed, but the bigger risk is having to pay back or even damages. Because unlike RandBlade I think it would be unwise for AZN to test the "best efforts" argument in court. Their lawyers seem to agree.
    Congratulations America

  12. #2652
    Quote Originally Posted by Timbuk2 View Post
    Its still a bit crap for a business to not meet their commitments.

    In the vendors I use in my work I'd not be renewing a contract with AZN with their failure to deliver.
    There isn't a vendor on the planet that's delivered their most optimistic projections. Pfizer, Moderna, all of them have cut back delivery targets.

    The EU are farcically creating a stink with AZN to distract from their own failings. The only reason there's a delay is the EU delayed signing the contracts for three months. Actions have consequences.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  13. #2653
    Quote Originally Posted by Hazir View Post
    Haha, so please explain why AZN is folding.
    How are they folding?

    Or are they doing what they always said they were going to do and using their reasonable best efforts to fix the problems?

    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  14. #2654
    Quote Originally Posted by Timbuk2 View Post
    Its still a bit crap for a business to not meet their commitments.

    In the vendors I use in my work I'd not be renewing a contract with AZN with their failure to deliver.
    Pharma companies don't operate under normal rules, Tim. The reality is that most pharma companies (outside of generics houses) aren't selling interchangeable commodities, but each have unique and critical offerings that cannot be easily replaced. And furthermore, shortages of various drugs and devices have become a fact of life nowadays, victims of consolidation, regulation, and a lack of stockpiling. If anything goes wrong in a production process - and they do, from raw material shortages to microbial contamination to safety incidents to FDA letters - you might experience a global shortfall with little to no notice. And rarely will you have serious consequences for the company in question, outside of the occasional acquisition (as in the case of Sanofi acquiring Genzyme when they had serious production issues that made them a target).

    The real consequences, of course, are to their bottom line - drugs and devices are high margin businesses, but also capital intensive. You lose vast sums of money when production is delayed, so they have every incentive to keep things going. For a low margin corner of the business like the vaccine world (especially for something that is ostensibly being sold at cost), those incentives become lower while the scale of capital necessary remains very high.

    In normal ramp-up of production, you wouldn't go from zero to a billion doses in less than a year. That's crazy fast and will undoubtedly come with bottlenecks and setbacks. The timelines promised by these companies have generally been predicated on the assumption that everything goes right, an assumption we know will be violated.

    The issue here probably has less to do with AZN's production failings or fail to deliver exactly what was promised. Their problem was probably a failure in managing expectations appropriately, including timely and transparent updates to the key stakeholders. This is a basic rule of sales and marketing and I suspect they did a bad job.
    "When I meet God, I am going to ask him two questions: Why relativity? And why turbulence? I really believe he will have an answer for the first." - Werner Heisenberg (maybe)

  15. #2655
    Quote Originally Posted by Timbuk2 View Post
    Its still a bit crap for a business to not meet their commitments.

    In the vendors I use in my work I'd not be renewing a contract with AZN with their failure to deliver.
    Think failure to deliver is not the real problem—after all, other manufacturers have done so too without there being nearly as much of a fuss. I suspect they notified the EU and tried to work with the Commission to find ways to address the problems—in accordance with their contracts, if those contracts are even remotely similar to the one with AZN. Had AZN notified the commission in a timely manner, I suspect all of this could have been avoided.
    "One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."

  16. #2656
    Quote Originally Posted by Aimless View Post
    Think failure to deliver is not the real problem—after all, other manufacturers have done so too without there being nearly as much of a fuss. I suspect they notified the EU and tried to work with the Commission to find ways to address the problems—in accordance with their contracts, if those contracts are even remotely similar to the one with AZN. Had AZN notified the commission in a timely manner, I suspect all of this could have been avoided.
    They notified them 2.5 months before the deadline for the doses to be sent. How much more timely should it have been?
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  17. #2657
    So the EU have torn up the Good Friday Agreement and are putting export controls on Northern Ireland . . . in an effort to get goods exported from the UK to the EU

    The UK should respond with magnamity and generosity. Offer to Ireland we will help vaccinate them as soon as we can.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  18. #2658
    Quote Originally Posted by RandBlade View Post
    They notified them 2.5 months before the deadline for the doses to be sent. How much more timely should it have been?
    First of all, Q2 ends in 2 months. Secondly, they must have known weeks ago they would not meet the target in the time available, and that is when they should've notified the EU.
    "One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."

  19. #2659
    Q1 ends a bit over 2 months from now and this drama has been running for days, and they were informed before this blew up. So yes close to 2.5 months.

    Why would they have known weeks ago what yield they'd have in the future for months from then.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  20. #2660
    Quote Originally Posted by RandBlade View Post
    So the EU have torn up the Good Friday Agreement and are putting export controls on Northern Ireland . . . in an effort to get goods exported from the UK to the EU

    The UK should respond with magnamity and generosity. Offer to Ireland we will help vaccinate them as soon as we can.
    Wow. Neither Ireland or NI seem happy with that. Not surprisingly.

    Who going to police it?

    Agree the UK should offer to help once our most vulnerable groups have had both doses.

  21. #2661
    Absolutely. We should help our own vulnerable, then Ireland, then via Covax start helping the third world poor.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  22. #2662
    Quote Originally Posted by RandBlade View Post
    Absolutely. We should help our own vulnerable, then Ireland, then via Covax start helping the third world poor.
    I'd rather help countries with a higher propensity to travel here. A quick search shows that's mainly counties from Europe. That seems to be more aligned with our nation interest, plus it improves relations with some key allies.

  23. #2663
    Quote Originally Posted by gogobongopop View Post
    I'd rather help countries with a higher propensity to travel here. A quick search shows that's mainly counties from Europe. That seems to be more aligned with our nation interest, plus it improves relations with some key allies.
    No, our "allies" are rich enough to help themselves. If they stop dealing with this with austerity.

    We need the globe to eliminate the virus as much as possible so that it stops mutating. We've had dangerous mutations now come out of Brazil and South Africa and it doesn't matter they're not close to us - this bugger gets around the planet in no time.

    Hence why Covax. Help nations that aren't rich enough to help themselves - to help them but to also help ourselves by stomping out this virus so it stops mutating, because a mutation anywhere on the planet will spread all over it. Our "allies" should be doing the same.

    The UK has donated more than half a billion pounds to Covax. Joe Biden has donated $4 billion to Covax. The entire EU combined . . . about €500 mn. The EU have not just spent 1/7th on vaccine development than the UK and USA per capita; the entire EU combined have donated less to Covax than the UK alone has done. They're closer to Donald Trump than to Biden and Boris.

    I thought Trump was out of office but the Commission are rapidly turning into MAGA Trumpites.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  24. #2664
    Seems others are seeing the connection too.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  25. #2665
    Does anyone here think the EU did the right thing by invoking this article 16 thing?

    It's gone like a lead balloon here. Everywhere.

    Can anyone defend it?

  26. #2666
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    Quote Originally Posted by wiggin View Post
    Pharma companies don't operate under normal rules, Tim. The reality is that most pharma companies (outside of generics houses) aren't selling interchangeable commodities, but each have unique and critical offerings that cannot be easily replaced. And furthermore, shortages of various drugs and devices have become a fact of life nowadays, victims of consolidation, regulation, and a lack of stockpiling. If anything goes wrong in a production process - and they do, from raw material shortages to microbial contamination to safety incidents to FDA letters - you might experience a global shortfall with little to no notice. And rarely will you have serious consequences for the company in question, outside of the occasional acquisition (as in the case of Sanofi acquiring Genzyme when they had serious production issues that made them a target).

    The real consequences, of course, are to their bottom line - drugs and devices are high margin businesses, but also capital intensive. You lose vast sums of money when production is delayed, so they have every incentive to keep things going. For a low margin corner of the business like the vaccine world (especially for something that is ostensibly being sold at cost), those incentives become lower while the scale of capital necessary remains very high.

    In normal ramp-up of production, you wouldn't go from zero to a billion doses in less than a year. That's crazy fast and will undoubtedly come with bottlenecks and setbacks. The timelines promised by these companies have generally been predicated on the assumption that everything goes right, an assumption we know will be violated.

    The issue here probably has less to do with AZN's production failings or fail to deliver exactly what was promised. Their problem was probably a failure in managing expectations appropriately, including timely and transparent updates to the key stakeholders. This is a basic rule of sales and marketing and I suspect they did a bad job.
    It was a major mistake to try to hide behind the best efforts argument. That and the arrogant behavior of their CEO made this problem into an outright disaster.
    Congratulations America

  27. #2667
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    Quote Originally Posted by gogobongopop View Post
    Does anyone here think the EU did the right thing by invoking this article 16 thing?

    It's gone like a lead balloon here. Everywhere.

    Can anyone defend it?
    You expected anything else than the EU coming hard down after AZN's CEO implied he'd hoodwinked the Commission?

    You should understand that public opinion in the UK does not matter at all on this side of the channel. As has been pointed out before, this is in the news in Germany mostly. For the rest the news doesn't register very much. There is no criticism of the way the Commission is reacting to the failure of AZN to deliver.
    Congratulations America

  28. #2668
    Quote Originally Posted by gogobongopop View Post
    Does anyone here think the EU did the right thing by invoking this article 16 thing?

    It's gone like a lead balloon here. Everywhere.

    Can anyone defend it?
    They broke the treaty in doing so - they failed to inform the UK before doing so, they just announced it at a press conference. So they're in breach of international law.
    They broke the spirit of the treaty in doing so too - they did so without consulting with Ireland first.

    Unprecedented full house now: The UK Tory Government, the Irish Coalition Government, the Labour opposition, the DUP, Sinn Fein, Alliance and the SDLP have all unanimously come out against this.

    The EU have united Northern Ireland, Ireland and Britain. Incredible.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ominous Gamer View Post
    ℬeing upset is understandable, but be upset at yourself for poor planning, not at the world by acting like a spoiled bitch during an interview.

  29. #2669
    Quote Originally Posted by RandBlade View Post
    No, our "allies" are rich enough to help themselves. If they stop dealing with this with austerity.

    We need the globe to eliminate the virus as much as possible so that it stops mutating. We've had dangerous mutations now come out of Brazil and South Africa and it doesn't matter they're not close to us - this bugger gets around the planet in no time.

    Hence why Covax. Help nations that aren't rich enough to help themselves - to help them but to also help ourselves by stomping out this virus so it stops mutating, because a mutation anywhere on the planet will spread all over it. Our "allies" should be doing the same.

    The UK has donated more than half a billion pounds to Covax. Joe Biden has donated $4 billion to Covax. The entire EU combined . . . about €500 mn. The EU have not just spent 1/7th on vaccine development than the UK and USA per capita; the entire EU combined have donated less to Covax than the UK alone has done. They're closer to Donald Trump than to Biden and Boris.

    I thought Trump was out of office but the Commission are rapidly turning into MAGA Trumpites.
    Where did these numbers come from?

    According to this: https://www.gavi.org/investing-gavi/...donor-profiles

    EU Commission: 330 million
    Germany: 780 million
    France: 620 million
    Italy: 500 million
    Holland: 300 million
    Spain: 30 million
    Sweden: 200 million
    UK: 2.6 billion (wow!)
    USA: 1.4 billion
    Ireland: 17 million
    China: 5 million (the fuck...)

    Out of interest - why would you help Ireland first?

  30. #2670
    Quote Originally Posted by Hazir View Post
    You expected anything else than the EU coming hard down after AZN's CEO implied he'd hoodwinked the Commission?

    You should understand that public opinion in the UK does not matter at all on this side of the channel. As has been pointed out before, this is in the news in Germany mostly. For the rest the news doesn't register very much. There is no criticism of the way the Commission is reacting to the failure of AZN to deliver.
    Well given that we voted to break international law WRT to a UK/EU treaty (and it was only the House of Lords, thank the Lord, that blocked it), I suppose the precedent has been set.

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