1.5 million doses of AstraZeneca vaccine arriving from U.S. on Tuesday, Anand says - Action News
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1.5 million doses of AstraZeneca vaccine arriving from U.S. on Tuesday, Anand says

Procurement Minister Anita Anand says 1.5 million doses of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine on loan to Canada from the U.S. will arrive on Tuesday.

Vaccine deliveries continue to see hiccups, with Moderna shipment delayed and no news on Johnson & Johnson

Procurement minister announces arrival date for U.S. AstraZeneca vaccine doses

4 years ago
Duration 2:40
Procurement Minister Anita Anand announced that 1.5 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine will arrive in Canada by truck from the U.S. on Tuesday, March 30.

Procurement Minister Anita Anand says 1.5 million doses of the AstraZeneca-Oxford COVID-19 vaccine on loan from the U.S. will arrive in Canadaby truck on Tuesday.

Theshipment is the first Canada expects toreceivefrom manufacturing plants in the United Stateswhich has sofar ensured that all vaccines produced in the U.S.go to Americans.

At a press conference today, Anand saidthose doses arepart of a surge in vaccine deliveries set totake place over the coming weeks.

"We have said from the beginning that the first quarter of this year would represent a period of increasingly supply as vaccine manufacturers ramped up production, and this would be followed by significant supplies coming to Canada," Anand said.

"We are now seeing that supply surge and it is set to continue."

Canada had received just over 6.1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and the Serum Institute of India as of yesterday, according to federal government data.

Pfizer has confirmed it plans to ship at least a million doses per week to Canadafrom now until the end of May, while Modernawill ship every two weeks, with 855,000doses of its vaccine shipping to Canada the week of Apr.5and 1.2 million doses shipping the week of Apr. 19.

Vaccine supply challenges remain

Despite the projectedsurge in deliveries, Canada's vaccine supply continues to experience major challenges even as health officials warn thatCOVID-19 case counts are setto rise rapidly in the coming weeks as virus variantstake hold.

The AstraZeneca doses arrivingfrom the U.S. were manufactured in facilities that haven'tyet received Health Canada approval. Dr. Supriya Sharma, Health Canada's chief medical adviser, said yesterday the doses will need to be stored until the regulator completes a regulatory review.

And ashipment of 590,400 Moderna doses that was supposed to arrive Saturday has been delayed bya backlog in the company'squality assurance process.

Anandsaid she was assured in a conversation with Moderna executives that the delay is not related to new European Union export restrictions meant to address vaccine supply shortages on the continent. She said the delayed shipment hasbeen approved alreadyfor export and will arrive "a few days later."

"We are closely monitoring the global environment, including export restrictions in a number of jurisdictions," said Anand. "Given the profound period of global demand for vaccine, there will continue to be bumps along the way and we will continue to work every day to ensure that vaccines arrive in this country."

FedEx workers offload a plane carrying doses of the Moderna COVID19 vaccine from Europe at Pearson International Airport in Toronto on Wednesday, March 24, 2021. A shipment of over half a million Moderna doses scheduled to arrive Saturday has been delayed because of a backlog in the company's quality assurance process. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Meanwhile, the fate of 1.5 million doses ofthe AstraZeneca vaccine made by the Serum Institute of Indiabound for Canadais uncertain, after India reportedlyplaced a temporary hold on all major vaccine exports to allow itto meet domestic demand.

While Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said earlier this week he's seen nothing to indicatethat April and May deliveries to Canada will be affected, India's deputy high commissioner in Canada saidthe delivery schedule"remains under discussion."

Anddespite being approved three weeks ago by Health Canada, Johnson & Johnson still hasn't confirmed delivery dates for the any of the 10 million doses of its one-shot vaccine that Canada has ordered.

Ford criticizes Ottawa on vaccine supply

At a press conference Friday, Ontario Premier Doug Ford criticized Ottawa for not supplying enough vaccines to the provinces and territories. Ford has mostly avoided attacking the federal government directlyon the topic of vaccine supply, even as other conservative leaders including Alberta Premier Jason Kenney and Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe have done so regularly.

"I have been very diplomatic and I've been very complimentary and collaborative with the federal government [but] enough's enough. This is becoming a joke," said Ford. "We need more vaccines."

Fordsaid pharmacies in the provincehave tens of thousands of appointments booked but are running out of doses.

Data that Ontario's Ministry of Health shared with CBC News late Friday evening showthe province has received 2.35 milliondoses from the federal government, and has administered1.83 million doses.

The ministrysaid Ontario has the capacity to administer 150,000 dosesper day. Slightly less than 83,000 doses were administered in the province yesterday.

According to a vaccine tracker maintained by CBC News, Canada is behind 34countries in terms of the percentage of thepopulation that has received at least one dose of vaccine.

The tracker, which only includescountries that reportvaccine data publicly,shows that 10.73 per cent of Canadians have received one dose, while only 1.7 per cent have been fully vaccinated.

The opposition Conservatives led off question period today by pressing the government on vaccine deliveries.

Conservative MPGrard Deltellcited the delay of Canada's Moderna shipment and the uncertainty created by export restrictions in the EU and India.

"Canada needs vaccines, so why are there delays?" asked Deltellin French.

Liberal MP Steve MacKinnon responded by saying the government was proud to meet its original target of 6 million vaccine dosesdelivered before the end of March. MacKinnon added that another 3 million doses are expected to arrive next week.

"We are determined to continue our momentum forward with regard to vaccine imports and supply for all Canadians,"MacKinnon said.

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