Australia was due to get 3.8 million doses of the European-made AstraZeneca in February,but Health Department secretary Professor Brendan Murphy said neither the company nor Australia knew that supply would bestymied by Europe as the continent battles ongoing coronavirus epidemics.
“It’s not been possible until now to have certainty in planning,” he told a Senate estimates hearing on Wednesday morning.
Under questioning from Labor senator Murray Watt,Professor Murphy said early projections of having 4 million people vaccinated by the end of March were based on receiving those AstraZeneca doses,plus international shipments of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine.
“That was patently unachievable given that we didn’t get those international doses,” he said. “We’ve been working with Europe just about every day to try and get AstraZeneca released. It’s been a huge effort.”
On Tuesday evening,the AstraZeneca vaccine being manufactured by CSL in Victoriapassed the final hurdle,after the Therapeutic Goods Administration approved the release of the first four batches - a total of 832,200 doses.
Professor Murphy said securing local vaccine production was “the single best thing we’ve done in this vaccine rollout”.