An American vaccine firm has opened the first mRNA manufacturing plant in Britain, against a backdrop of increasing anti-jab rhetoric in the US.
The new facility located in Oxfordshire is part of a £1bn investment in the UK by Moderna, which specializes in mRNA, the same novel vaccine technology that was used to-develop jabs during the Covid pandemic.
The facility is now fully operational and licensed to supply British-made COVID-19 vaccines to support NHS seasonal vaccination programs. It will also be conducting research into mRNA applications for cancer and rare diseases.
Moderna’s chief executive has hailed the UK as a country that “still believes in vaccination” in what was perceived to be a swipe at the US, where Donald Trump’s administration has taken a more skeptical approach.
Sky news reports: Several pharma companies, including Germany’s leading mRNA pioneer BioNTech, are now racing to develop new therapies.
Moderna says the plant will produce up to 100 million doses of its existing vaccine products each year. It has also been designed to scale-up production to 250 million doses a year in the event of a new disease outbreak.
“God-forbid, if there is another pandemic, we can switch the facility any day,” said Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel.
The UK investment deal was agreed by the previous government, but the plant’s opening is welcome relief for the current one.
In recent weeks, four major pharmaceutical companies have halted planned investments in the UK following disputes over drug pricing and profitability in the UK.
‘A great statement’
It also promises to restore domestic vaccine manufacturing capability in the UK, the lack of which was exposed when dangerous supply interruptions threatened the early COVID response.
“It’s a really fast way of getting new vaccines discovered,” said Lord Patrick Vallance, former chief scientist and now science minister.
“It’s also a great statement of confidence in the UK that [Moderna has] chosen to base themselves here.”
Moderna: UK ‘still believes’ in vaccines
The mRNA molecule is the same used by our cells to order the production of new proteins, and allows vaccines to be produced using just the genetic code of a virus or other biological target.
Moderna’s investment decision pre-dated Donald Trump’s return to the White House, but the Moderna CEO said its operation in the UK – a country that “still believes in vaccination” – may pay dividends if anti-vaccine rhetoric translates into a lack of demand for its products in the US.
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