The Peterborough Examiner

Feds hold ceremony for Moderna vaccine factory

Quebec facility will help Canada’s health security

- MORGAN LOWRIE

The new mRNA vaccine factory being built near Montreal by Moderna will help ensure Canada’s health security in the face of more pandemics that are expected in the coming decades, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday.

Trudeau took part in a groundbrea­king ceremony in Laval, Que., for the new facility by the Massachuse­tts-based biotechnol­ogy company. He donned a helmet and reflective vest as he toured the grounds, where preparatio­n and foundation work is underway.

The factory is expected to be completed in 2024 at the earliest and produce 100 million doses of mRNA vaccines per year. It will manufactur­e vaccines against COVID-19 and other respirator­y viruses, including influenza and respirator­y syncytial virus, or RSV.

The prime minister told reporters the COVID-19 pandemic has spurred conversati­ons about “how to make sure Canada is once again able to respond not just to its own needs, but to help lead the world at a time of uncertaint­y and a time of potentiall­y more pandemics in the coming decades.”

He was accompanie­d by several provincial and federal politician­s, including federal Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne and Laval Mayor Stéphane Boyer. Trudeau told reporters Moderna’s new factory represents an investment in the health-care security of Canadians and also in a research ecosystem that will deliver good jobs for years to come.

Stephen Hoge, the president of Moderna, said Quebec was chosen for the facility in part because of its “strong regulatory environmen­t” and its skilled workforce.

Moderna, Hoge added, has dozens of medication­s under study, including those to tackle cancer and rare metabolic diseases. “There’s incredible potential in our technology in cancer,” he said, adding the company is awaiting results from early-stage clinical trials.

Champagne said Canada has committed to purchase a certain number of vaccines from the factory as part of a seven-year agreement, but he didn’t provide a precise number. He said the federal government did not invest in the facility itself.

The factory, Champagne added, would employ hundreds of people during its constructi­on and “more than 200 people” once it opens.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Justin Trudeau speaks at the official groundbrea­king ceremony for the Moderna vaccine production facility Monday in Laval.
RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS Justin Trudeau speaks at the official groundbrea­king ceremony for the Moderna vaccine production facility Monday in Laval.

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