Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Moderna plans to build African vaccine factory

- CAROLYN Y. JOHNSON AND TYLER PAGER

Biotechnol­ogy company Moderna, under pressure to send more of its coronaviru­s vaccine to lower-income countries, announced Thursday that it would build a manufactur­ing plant in Africa capable of producing 500 million doses of messenger RNA vaccines a year.

The announceme­nt follows tensions between the Biden administra­tion and Moderna that boiled over in the past week, including at a contentiou­s meeting Friday, as the U.S. government urges the biotechnol­ogy company to send more coronaviru­s vaccines to lower-income countries, according to multiple people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to disclose private conversati­ons.

GROWING FRUSTRATIO­N

For months, the U.S. government has pleaded with Moderna to boost its domestic and internatio­nal production so it can ramp up donations to low- and middle-income countries. But in two meetings during the past week, Biden administra­tion officials have grown exasperate­d over the biotechnol­ogy company’s refusal to commit to doing so, the people said.

One senior U.S. official, who was not authorized to speak publicly, said the government pushed Moderna to commit to 1 billion doses for low- and middle-income countries by the end of 2022. But Moderna responded with a proposal that did not meet the Biden administra­tion’s expectatio­ns, as the company said it does not have the capacity to ramp up production immediatel­y.

The manufactur­ing facility Moderna pledged Thursday to build in Africa will not have an immediate impact on the coronaviru­s pandemic because it will take two to four years to build. The new facility comes after the Biden administra­tion asked Moderna months ago to boost its internatio­nal production in Africa, the U.S. official said.

The Biden administra­tion’s frustratio­n with Moderna in recent months stems in part from the recognitio­n that the company partnered with the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to invent its vaccine, and that the U.S. government gave Moderna billions of taxpayer dollars to underwrite research and developmen­t of the vaccines, and for purchase of doses.

“We look forward to seeing exactly what they will do,” the senior Biden administra­tion official said. “We are in intense discussion­s to expand capacity to increase the number of doses they are providing to low- and middle-income countries in the shorter term.”

U.S. officials feel the company has not done enough to boost production to send doses overseas, and instead, prioritize­d its own profits.

The White House declined to comment.

Moderna did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about tensions with the Biden administra­tion.

MODERNA BILLIONAIR­ES

Just this week, three people associated with Moderna were among the 44 new billionair­es on Forbes’s list of the 400 richest Americans. Making their debut on this year’s list: Moderna’s chairman, Noubar Afeyan, one of the U.S. biotech company’s founders; board member Robert S. Langer, also a co-founder; and early investor Timothy A. Springer.

“We played a lot of scenarios over the last couple of months and decided we should do something big in Africa. The only way to do it right, if you take a 5-to-10year view, was to build our own plant like we’ve done in America, so that’s exactly the model,” Moderna chief executive Stephane Bancel said in an interview.

Creating manufactur­ing capabiliti­es in underserve­d areas of the world has become a major goal for public health advocates amid stark inequities in global access to coronaviru­s vaccines. A recent Kaiser Family Foundation analysis found that nearly two-thirds of people in wealthy countries have received at least one dose of a vaccine, compared with 2% in low-income countries.

The United States has already committed to donating more than 1.1 billion doses of coronaviru­s vaccine to the world, including two purchases of 500 million doses each of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

Last month, President Joe Biden convened a virtual global summit focused on vaccinatin­g the world’s population. The president called on global leaders to fully vaccinate 70% of the world’s population by next September.

“This is an all-hands-ondeck crisis,” Biden said. “And the good news is, we know how to beat this pandemic: vaccines, public health measures and collective action.”

Moving manufactur­ing into less-wealthy countries is one possible solution to the lack of global supply, but many advocates favor transferri­ng the technology to local companies to ensure that countries have the ability to respond to new threats, and to ensure their doses do not end up exported elsewhere in the world.

Bancel said the company has not decided where the factory will be, but that the doses made there would remain in Africa, and Moderna would recruit and train a local workforce.

He said the factory would manufactur­e the mRNA that goes into the vaccines and encase it in the protective lipid bubble that delivers the vaccine and keeps it stable. He said details were still being worked out about where the vaccines would go into vials.

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