Turkey to begin human trials for locally made coronavirus vaccines
is counting down to its first vaccine, or vaccines, against COVID-19. If the work goes as planned, a vaccine will be available in the second quarter of 2021 when the country plans to produce 50 million doses monthly. The Directorate of Health Institutes endorses 31 vaccine and drug projects, and among them are two vaccines developed by Erciyes University in the central province of Kayseri and by the private company Koçak Farma. All three are set to switch to human trials by the end of this month, according to officials who say groups of healthy volunteers, composed of 20 to 80 people, will be injected in the first stage. The number will increase in the following stages and will eventually reach at least 3,000 people in Turkey and abroad. Advancing to the next stages depends on whether the vaccines have serious side effects on volunteers. The vaccines are subject to licensing by the Turkish Medicines and Medical Devices Agency (TİTCK), which is a member of the International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH). ICH membership allows vaccine licenses to be internationally recognized. Professor Aykut Özdarendeli, who oversees the vaccine study at Erciyes University, said Turkish scientists’ knowledge and infrastructure in line with international standards helped them to accelerate the vaccine development project.
METEOROLOGY experts warned the public in Istanbul and its surrounding area about an upcoming twoday cold snap accompanied by heavy rainfall. A new weather system hailing from the Balkans will settle in the Marmara region, which includes Turkey’s most populated city Istanbul, starting today. The Turkish State Meteorological Service (TSMS) says temperatures will drop “up to 10 degrees Celsius” (50 degrees Fahrenheit) in the western regions. Tekirdağ, Kırklareli and Edirne provinces in the Thrace region are expected to be affected.
Strong winds will also hit the Marmara and Aegean regions today and Central Anatolia and the Western Mediterranean region tomorrow. Rainfall is expected to end later tomorrow after moving toward the Western Mediterranean and western Black Sea regions as well as west of the Central Anatolian region.
Associate professor Deniz Demirhan from Istanbul Technical University’s (İTÜ) Department of Meteorological Engineering told Anadolu Agency (AA) that temperatures that have hovered above seasonal norms will drop significantly and warned of possible hailstorms in the northern Aegean, western Black Sea, Thrace and Marmara regions. Turkey, like many other countries affected by climate change, has seen late shifts to cooler autumn temperatures in the past few years. Indeed, it was among the countries reporting new record high temperatures last month. September was the warmest month globally, according to a new report announced yesterday.
“September was warmer by 0.05 degrees Celsius than September 2019, the previous warmest September,” the European Union’s Earth Observation Programme said. Demirhan said a large cumulonimbus formation expected to form today will aggravate the bad weather.
Rainfall, on the other hand, could be good news for Istanbul, as experts have warned of low water levels in dams. Adil Tek, who heads the Meteorology Laboratory of Istanbul’s Boğaziçi University Kandilli Observatory, told Demirören News Agency (DHA) on Tuesday that water levels are around 35% due to the low amount of rainfall last month. “Based on daily consumption, Istanbul now has water supply enough for only 70 or 80 days. Urgent action is needed, and people should consume water more carefully,” he stressed. Tek said that although temperatures will drop below seasonal normals in November, the following months will see them rising above seasonal normals again and the likelihood of snowfall for the city in winter was low. “We anticipated rainfall in September in Istanbul, but it was only one-third compared to seasonal normals in the past years,” Tek said.