Moderna Snubs Nigeria, Plans $500m Vaccine Plant In Kenya
Moderna Inc has ignored Nigeria, the most populous country in Africa by choosing Kenya to set up a $500million manufacturing facility to produce RNA (mRNA) vaccines, including COVID-19 shots.
The facility that will supply the vaccine needed in Nigeria, Togo, Cameron and other African countries will be the first in Africa to produce messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccines, including COVID-19 shots.
The plant is expected to supply as many as 500 million doses of mRNA vaccines to the continent each year.
Moderna’s COVID vaccine brought in $17.7 billion in sales in 2021 and has been cleared for use in over 70 countries.
Also, the company has plans to start filling doses of its COVID vaccine in Africa as early as 2023.
Africa has lagged sharply behind other regions in vaccinating its citizens through the pandemic and there have been several efforts in recent months to help the continent produce its own mRNA COVID-19 shots.
According to the Kenya’s President, Uhuru Kenyatta in a statement
“We all know the challenges that Kenya and the entire continent of Africa went through in the earlier stages of this pandemic that resulted in Africa being left behind.Not because of want but because of lack and Moderna has come to fill that space.”
The World Health Organisation last year set up a tech transfer hub in South Africa to give poorer nations the know-how to produce COVID-19 vaccines and has been trying to get Moderna and Pfizer to join in its efforts.
However, in September, a senior WHO official said there had not been much progress in talks with Moderna.
WHO-backed South Africa’s Afrigen Biologics said in February it would produce a version of Moderna’s shot, though it has not yet managed to enlist the U.S. vaccine maker’s assistance.
BioNTech, which teamed up with Pfizer to make the western world’s most widely-used COVID-19 shot, has also announced plans to begin work on its mRNA manufacturing facility in the African Union this year.
Also, the company said that the Moderna’s Kenyan facility would manufacture drug substance and could be expanded to include fill/finish and packaging capabilities.
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