Covid-19 News South Africa

Advertise your job ad
    Search jobs

    Elections 2024

    Jan Moganwa Talks CITIZANS and their political hopes

    Jan Moganwa Talks CITIZANS and their political hopes

    sona.co.za

    Biovac gears up to manufacture Pfizer vaccine

    South Africa's Biovac Institute will start making Pfizer-BioNTech's Covid-19 vaccine early next year after receiving the drug substance from Europe.
    Source:
    Source: Pixabay

    Biovac's "fill and finish" deal with Pfizer, announced in July, will make it one of the few companies processing Covid-19 shots in Africa, where many countries have struggled to access sufficient doses during the pandemic.

    "We expect that the Cape Town facility will be incorporated into our supply chain by the end of this year," Patrick van der Loo, Pfizer regional president for Africa and the Middle East, told a conference in Kigali on vaccine manufacturing in Africa.

    "Biovac will obtain the drug substance from facilities in Europe and manufacturing of finished doses will commence early in 2022," he said.

    Large Western pharmaceutical companies including Pfizer have been widely criticised for not doing enough to facilitate vaccine production in developing countries.

    No transfer of intellectual property rights

    In July Pfizer's CEO urged World Trade Organization members not to support a waiver on some intellectual property rights for Covid-19 vaccines - a proposal by South Africa and India.

    Biovac's deal with Pfizer covers the final stages of manufacturing, where the vaccine is processed and put into vials, but does not represent a transfer of the intellectual property underpinning the vaccine.

    Van der Loo listed what he described as historical challenges faced by pharmaceutical companies on the continent, saying these explained the difficulties in kickstarting local vaccine manufacturing.

    Among them were irregular power and water supplies, which have been an issue in South Africa over the years.

    "Last year ... water was rationed, which made it very difficult both practically but also ethically to obtain and use large quantities of water for trial runs through the equipment as part of our start-up tech transfer phase," he said, referring to operations at the Biovac facility.

    Source: Reuters

    Reuters, the news and media division of Thomson Reuters, is the world's largest multimedia news provider, reaching billions of people worldwide every day.

    Go to: https://www.reuters.com/
    Let's do Biz