Bangkok Post

NO ORDERS FOR AFRICA’S FIRST JABS FACTORY

Aspen Pharmacare, in South Africa, may end vaccine production in weeks. By Lynsey Chutel

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The first factory in Africa licensed to produce Covid-19 vaccines for the African market has not received a single order and may shut down that production line within weeks if the situation doesn’t change, say executives of the company, Aspen Pharmacare. The factory, in the coastal South African city of Gqeberha, formerly known as Port Elizabeth, was celebrated as a solution to the continent’s unequal access to vaccines when it announced a deal to start manufactur­ing Covid-19 vaccines in November.

But no purchasers have appeared, as the slow distributi­on of vaccines in Africa has left health agencies with a backlog of supplies. Commercial production never started, in what officials say is an ominous sign for other African countries that had considered manufactur­ing Covid19 vaccines.

Throughout the coronaviru­s pandemic, many African countries have lagged far behind much of the world in getting their people vaccinated — and some countries have had difficulty distributi­ng what doses they did get.

Less than 20% of the total population in Africa is fully vaccinated against the coronaviru­s. Officials and politician­s blamed wealthy countries for hoarding vaccine doses when vaccines first became available.

Countries reliant on donations of vaccines were at the back of the line. Building the capacity to manufactur­e vaccine doses in Africa was billed as a solution to this vaccine inequity as well as a way to prepare for future pandemics.

South African drugmaker Aspen Pharmacare was lauded when it signed a deal with Johnson & Johnson in November that would allow it to produce and market the single-dose vaccine as Aspenovax. The vaccine, identical to the vaccine created by Johnson & Johnson, was intended for the African market.

But the initial enthusiasm has not led to purchases, for complicate­d reasons.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, speaking last week at a global summit on the pandemic organized by the White House, blamed “internatio­nal agencies” for failing to buy vaccines from a pioneering African manufactur­er.

“This immediatel­y just devalues the whole process of local manufactur­ing and local production of vaccines. This, ladies and gentlemen, must change,” Mr Ramaphosa said.

Gavi, an internatio­nal non-profit agency that manages vaccine purchasing deals for low-income countries through the COVAX alliance, said its contract with Johnson & Johnson has prevented it from buying from Aspen directly.

Gavi said: “COVAX is still under contract with J&J, and we would be very happy for any doses that we are still expecting to be supplied by Aspen. We have communicat­ed this to J&J. However, again, this is solely a decision that rests with J&J.”

Vaccine procuremen­t contracts are protected by non-disclosure agreements that have made the process opaque. Johnson & Johnson has not responded to a request for comment.

US regulators have restricted use of the Johnson & Johnson shot, preferring the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines instead. But recent evidence suggests that over time, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine is preventing infections and illnesses about as effectivel­y as the others, and may prove to offer more durable protection.

Stavros Nicolaou, Aspen’s head of strategic trade developmen­t, said that if there are no orders in the next six weeks, Aspen plans to repurpose the sterile production line to produce anaestheti­cs and other drugs.

“That goodwill” that accompanie­d the initial launch, Mr Nicolau said, has “not been matched with orders from the multilater­al procuremen­t agencies.”

In talks with multilater­al agencies, Aspen was hoping orders would roll in at the beginning of this year, in time for it to start producing commercial batches of the Aspenovax vaccine by the end of March.

But by then agencies had already secured enough vaccines from other sources to begin large-scale vaccinatio­n drives. Those efforts were hobbled by logistical and other issues that prevented jabs from making it into people’s arms, leaving the continent with a glut of doses that is ongoing today.

As a result, the African Union and agencies like COVAX have not placed new orders in recent months with other manufactur­ers, either.

John Nkengasong, the outgoing head of the African Union’s Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, recalled a 2021 summit during which thousands participat­ed in a Zoom call to pledge to build up Africa’s vaccine manufactur­ing.

Mr Nkengasong, who said he has been in talks with Aspen and African leaders to find a solution, described the lack of orders as “very worrying,” adding that it would discourage other African companies from developing capacity to manufactur­e Covid-19 vaccines.

“If those companies are not supported, the commitment that we all made at the height of this pandemic would really not have been translated into facts,” he said.

 ?? ?? PREFERRED JAB: A healthcare worker administer­s the Pfizer coronaviru­s disease vaccine to Simphiwe, 13, in Johannesbu­rg, South Africa, on Dec 4.
PREFERRED JAB: A healthcare worker administer­s the Pfizer coronaviru­s disease vaccine to Simphiwe, 13, in Johannesbu­rg, South Africa, on Dec 4.

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