Denmark
aims to produce coronavirus vaccines in 2022
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[April 27, 2021]
COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Denmark aims to
start local production of coronavirus vaccines in 2022, Prime Minister
Mette Frederiksen said, after previously expressing concern over the
European Union's handling of vaccine procurement.
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A new plant to produce vaccines will be owned and operated by the
private sector and a tendering process and will be announced in a
few weeks, she told Danish media late on Monday.
"We would like to ensure greater security of vaccine supplies on
Danish soil," Frederiksen said. "We see vaccines as part of
Denmark's overall preparedness and thus as critical infrastructure."
Frederiksen has been critical of the EU's approach to ordering,
approving and distributing vaccines within the 27 nation bloc. She
agreed with Austria and Israel last month to set up a joint research
and development fund and possibly production facilities for COVID-19
vaccines to ensure long-term supplies.
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Denmark's future plant will
manufacture mRNA vaccines, an advanced
technology used in the COVID-19 shots produced
by BioNTech/Pfizer and Moderna, Frederiksen
said.
She did not quantify the amount of vaccines that
will be produced or give any financial detail.
The foundation that controls Danish drug maker
Novo Nordisk said last month it was in
preliminary talks with the government about
establishing local vaccine production.
(Reporting by Tim Barsoe; Editing by Jacob
Gronholt-Pedersen, Nikolaj Skydsgaard and
Catherine Evans)
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