Cape
Town-based company Biovac expected to produce 100 million doses annually,
destined for African Union countries, under the deal.
Pfizer
and BioNTech have said they struck a deal with South Africa-based Company
Biovac for the production of COVID-19 vaccines for the African Union (AU).
In
a statement published on Wednesday, the two companies said Cape Town-based
Biovac will complete the last step in the manufacturing process, known as “fill
and finish”, of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine.
“To
facilitate Biovac’s involvement in the process, technical transfer, on-site
development and equipment installation activities will begin immediately,” read
the statement.
Ingredients
to produce the jabs will arrive from plants based in Europe, while the
manufacturing of finished doses will start in 2022, it added.
The
companies expect that at “full operation capacity” the annual production of
Biovac will hit 100 million doses per year – which will be distributed among
the AU member states.
The
announcement of the partnership came amid growing calls to tackle a striking
gap in global vaccine distribution. Just 1.5 percent of people in Africa are
fully vaccinated, compared with 43.7 percent in the European Union and nearly
50 percent in the United States, according to Our World in Data.
Unequal
distribution has been a source of debate for months at the World Trade
Organization as developing countries, headed by India and South Africa, have
been pushing a proposal to temporarily lift intellectual property (IP) rights
on vaccines to boost global manufacturing capacity.
Without
IP, among other issues, manufacturing companies would not risk being sued for
producing jabs without a licence from the vaccine-maker company.
But
the proposal, submitted in October and supported by the majority of the WTO’s
members, has been opposed by a handful of wealthy countries that claim such a
waiver would hamper technological innovation.
Last
month, the World Health Organization said it was setting up a hub, or training
facility, in South Africa to give companies there the know-how and licences to
produce COVID-19 vaccines.
Biovac
was one of the initial participants in the hub. It has been a partner of Pfizer
since 2015 to manufacture and distribute its Prevenar 13 pneumonia vaccine.
![Just 1.5 percent of people across the African continent are fully vaccinated [File: Siphiwe Sibeko/Reuters] Just 1.5 percent of people across the African continent are fully vaccinated [File: Siphiwe Sibeko/Reuters]](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEieCbKh8RcKQD9Ekd1ArLzkRnNVSul5b_0fi053Fe78xXsKeLI6rQU6H_7w2jVLogPd9iX2UCBPvUP8cw-uwkoQ3SzwakpCitr7icPBZQ4a44KlK5eouXREZ7nQTbtOlAdVJDFl3Qq-xSY/s16000/2021-07-05T114342Z_2065527803_RC28EO9RXD1X_RTRMADP_3_HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS-SAFRICA-POLICE.webp)
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