The Guardian (Charlottetown)

No made-in-Canada vaccines until late 2021

- RYAN TUMILTY

OTTAWA – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced plans to finally produce COVID-19 vaccines on Canadian soil, but the shots won’t come until the end of the year and do little to help the country’s increasing­ly stalled vaccine efforts.

Trudeau announced two deals Tuesday, one with vaccine manufactur­er Novavax and another with a Canadian company Precision Nanosystem­s.

Novavax will produce their COVID-19 vaccine at an under constructi­on National Research Council’s facility in Montreal. Precision, a Vancouver company, will receive $25.1 million to build a new facility that will be capable of manufactur­ing vaccines and other medicines.

But neither of those two companies will be ready to make vaccines in Canada before September when Trudeau has repeatedly said all Canadians who want a vaccine will have one available. Trudeau said the announceme­nt was about the future of pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ing.

“Canada will be developing domestic manufactur­ing so regardless of what could happen in the future,” he said. “We need to restore our capacity in our pharmaceut­ical industry in Canada to supply vaccines to Canadians whether it’s for further waves of this virus or if it’s for future viruses.”

Trudeau’s future goals come as the vaccine rollout in Canada appears increasing­ly stalled and are now under pressure from European countries who are imposing export controls on vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna.

Moderna cut its shipment to Canada this week by more than 20 per cent. Moderna delivers to Canada every three weeks. A timeline for a second shipment for later this month — forecast at nearly 250,000 doses — was removed from the government’s website that provides a forecast of deliveries.

When the Moderna reduction was announced, Trudeau said it would be short lived.

“This momentary reduction in production is something they have told us is only going to be for this one shipment,” he said last Friday.

Cole Davidson, a spokespers­on for Health Minister Patty Hajdu, said the shipment is still expected, but they are being cautious, given fluctuatio­ns in supply.

“We still expect to receive two million doses of the Moderna vaccine by the end of March, and while the scheduled delivery for the week of 22-28 February is still expected, the decision was taken to remove the forecasted allocation­s from our webpage until final shipment details are confirmed by the manufactur­er.”

Pfizer cut its shipment to Canada dramatical­ly over the last two weeks, with just 79,000 doses arriving this week and 70,000 arriving next week. There were no deliveries last week. The company is retooling a Belgium manufactur­ing plant to ultimately increase production of its vaccine.

After Trudeau’s press conference, Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne provided more detailed and less encouragin­g informatio­n, including that the NRC facility will take months to bring on Novavax’s technology; that the factory then has to be certified, and finally Health Canada has to approve the operations.

Champagne said it’s an investment geared to the future and when the plant is running it will produce two million doses a month.

“By investing in Canadian research in bio manufactur­ing capacity. We are advancing safe and effective vaccines and treatments and we are strengthen­ing our resiliency to future outbreaks,” he said.

Precision Nanosystem­s doesn’t anticipate its facility will be open until 2023 and is designed for a wide array of potential future medicines.

Trudeau and Trade Minister Mary Ng have also had multiple conversati­ons with European officials about new EU measures and have been assured Canada’s shipments will not be interrupte­d. But the European Commission stopped short of putting Canada on a list of countries specifical­ly exempt from the new measures.

The prime minister said he is confident in the assurances European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has offered.

“It’s not like a small claims court where you can show a document. The conversati­ons I had with the President of the European Commission were enough to reassure me and should be enough to reassure all Canadians.”

Conservati­ve leader Erin O’Toole said the delays are proof the Liberals have been consistent­ly behind demand.

“There has never been a plan with this government to manufactur­e and secure capacity for vaccines. We were late on rapid tests, late on vaccines and each week, the news gets worse,” he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
REUTERS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

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