It's not really a contracting issue. It's also not a legal one, because legal enforcement of anything is completely irrelevant for the time scales that matter.
The EU is in a position where none of these things can be fixed now.
The fact that the vaccine was developed in the UK and is produced in the UK can not be an argument. In light of the UK's reliance on the EU vaccine, all this does is show the UK contract with AZ as ethically deficient.
After all, the EU is currently the only supplier for the UK for the Pfizer vaccine - the one that kickstarted the UK's early success. How would the UK's vaccine program look now, if the EU had acted similarly from the start?
Sure, the EU could have mandated exactly this last year. But they shouldn't have. It would have been wrong and morally despicable.
The EU SHOULD now deal with their choices with grace. They don't, which is the real shame.
But if you are British and feel smug about your government's cunning, then I seriously doubt your moral compass.
The fact that the vaccine was developed in the UK and is produced in the UK can not be an argument. In light of the UK's reliance on the EU vaccine, all this does is show the UK contract with AZ as ethically deficient.
After all, the EU is currently the only supplier for the UK for the Pfizer vaccine - the one that kickstarted the UK's early success. How would the UK's vaccine program look now, if the EU had acted similarly from the start?
Sure, the EU could have mandated exactly this last year. But they shouldn't have. It would have been wrong and morally despicable.
The EU SHOULD now deal with their choices with grace. They don't, which is the real shame.
But if you are British and feel smug about your government's cunning, then I seriously doubt your moral compass.