The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Constructi­on problems prevented opening facility on schedule

- RYAN TUMILTY REUTERS

OTTAWA — Constructi­on problems delayed plans for a National Research Council manufactur­ing facility that could be making one of the leading COVID-19 vaccine candidates, but the facility also had no vaccine to produce after a controvers­ial deal with China fell apart.

Early in the pandemic, the government invested $44 million to create a vaccine production capability at the National Research Council’s facility on Royalmount Avenue in Montreal. The original plan was part of a partnershi­p with Cansino biologics, a Chinese firm that partnered with the NRC previously on an ebola vaccine.

The small facility was planned in two phases, one a temporary set-up that would allow Canada to produce the thousands of doses of vaccine to participat­e in a trial with Cansino’s. This would be followed by a permanent facility in a separate part of the same building.

The NRC worked on both the temporary facility and the permanent one at the same time, but in the fall they discovered the temporary facility would be more difficult to construct than they imagined.

“By October, it became apparent that the space allocated for the temporary clinical trial material facility would not meet GMP requiremen­ts without allocating significan­tly more of the $44 million budget to these temporary upgrades,” said the NRC’S spokespers­on Nic Defalco.

Vaccine production facilities have to meet exacting standards, called Good Manufactur­ing Practices (GMP). In the pharmaceut­ical industry, the standards are designed to ensure that batch to batch, vaccines and drugs are consistent and free of any contaminat­ion.

Defalco said the space for the temporary facility had structural issues that could not easily be overcome. Defalco said in addition to the added expense building out the temporary facility would have taken the same amount of time as the permanent one, so they decided to abandon the temporary facility.

The facility was designed with clinical trials in mind, where researcher­s often need tens of thousands of doses all produced to the same standards to show their product is safe and effective.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau with Economic Developmen­t Minister Melanie Joly and Innovation, Science and Industry Minister Navdeep Bains speak about COVID-19 vaccines during a visit to the National Research Council facility in Montreal.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau with Economic Developmen­t Minister Melanie Joly and Innovation, Science and Industry Minister Navdeep Bains speak about COVID-19 vaccines during a visit to the National Research Council facility in Montreal.

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