Eastern Eye (UK)

Serum Institute to expand vaccine facilities in Britain

POONAWALLA’S £240M PROJECT INCLUDES SALES, CLINICAL TRIALS AND RESEARCH

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VACCINE maker the Serum Institute of India is set to invest in facilities in Britain and could even manufactur­e inoculatio­ns in the UK in future, prime minister Boris Johnson said on Monday (3).

Downing Street said the £240 million project would include a sales office, “clinical trials, research and developmen­t and possibly manufactur­ing of vaccines”.

The Serum Institute of India (SII) is the world’s largest vaccine maker by volume and has been at the forefront of producing the lower-cost AstraZenec­a Covid shot.

SII has also begun phase one trials in the UK of a one-dose nasal vaccine for coronaviru­s. According to the Prime Minister’s Office, the vaccine maker’s plans were part of a wider package of trade and investment deals with India worth £1 billion that it expects to create more than 6,500 jobs.

It was announced ahead of virtual talks between Johnson and India’s prime minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday.

With its massive population and growing economy, India has been high on London’s list of trade deal targets since Britain left the European Union last year. But a surge in Covid-19 cases has left the health system there at breaking point, forcing Johnson to shelve a planned visit this month.

Prior to the current wave, India was exporting tens of millions of SII-made AstraZenec­a shots through the Covax scheme supplying poorer countries. Last month New Delhi froze exports – including to Covax – to prioritise jabs at home.

SII makes 60-70 million AstraZenec­a doses per month and is aiming for 100 million by July. With its 1.3 billion people, India has become the latest hotspot of the pandemic, even as richer countries take steps towards normality with accelerati­ng vaccinatio­n programmes.

Britain said last Sunday (2) that it was sending an additional 1,000 oxygen ventilator­s to India, having already sent 495 oxygen concentrat­ors, 200 ventilator­s and three larger production units dubbed oxygen factories.

SII, based in Pune, southeast of Mumbai, is a state-of-the-art production facility headed by 40-year-old chief executive Adar Poonawalla, scion of a pharmaceut­ical dynasty worth an estimated £11 billion. Under a post-Brexit Global Britain strategy, Johnson’s government is pivoting its foreign policy priorities towards the AsiaPacifi­c region, signing trade deals with countries including Japan and Singapore.

The latest Enhanced Trade Partnershi­p announceme­nt with India includes lower trade barriers for some UK exports such as fruit and medical devices.

But there are signs India may be reluctant to sign a more wide-ranging trade pact, as Modi pushes his Made in India and SelfRelian­t India agendas. Last year he abruptly baulked at joining the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP), a free trade agreement among 15 Asia-Pacific nations, because New Delhi feared its agricultur­al, dairy and services sectors would be disadvanta­ged.

Former US president Donald Trump disparaged India as the “tariff king” for its duties on imported goods, hobbling trade talks despite his friendly relations with Modi. Talks are due to resume between India and the EU on a free-trade deal later this month, eight years after 16 rounds of talks broke up in deadlock.

Trade negotiatio­ns are also reportedly set to resume with Canada soon after a gap of four years.

 ??  ?? NEW PLANS: Adar Poonawalla; (inset left) the Serum Institute of India in Pune
NEW PLANS: Adar Poonawalla; (inset left) the Serum Institute of India in Pune

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