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UK signs £1bn deal with Moderna for new vaccine centre

The UK government is collaborating with Boston-based Moderna to build the country’s first manufacturing centre for messenger RNA vaccines in a deal worth £1bn as it seeks a lead in responding to the current and future pandemics.

The government is aiming to secure homegrown supplies of a technology that has proved a crucial weapon in the fight against Covid-19 and offers the prospect of transforming treatment for other conditions such as cancer.

Once built, the centre — which could be located anywhere from the “Golden Triangle” between London, Oxford and Cambridge in the south of England to a site in the North-East — will manufacture up to 250mn doses per year, including some for export. The 10-year deal, which will be finalised later in the summer, also includes working together on research and development.

Sajid Javid, health secretary, said the government had drawn Moderna with a long-term supply agreement for vaccines as well as the UK’s strong life sciences ecosystem.

“This is huge in scale and capability,” he told the Financial Times. “I think what this shows is that in post-Brexit Britain, when it comes to inward investment, and particularly in this case, the life sciences, the UK is the leader in Europe.”

He had sought and secured “a personal mandate” from Boris Johnson, UK prime minister, to negotiate the deal, he added. Javid visited Moderna earlier this year.

In 2020, the government bet heavily on the vaccine developed by AstraZeneca in partnership with Oxford university, which never achieved the efficacy levels of the mRNA jabs.

Johnson said the investment would “guarantee jabs in the arms” and create new jobs, as the Boston-based biotech develops vaccines for other respiratory diseases including flu and respiratory syncytial virus.

“We’ve all seen what vaccines can do, and today’s partnership brings us one step closer to finding cures for some of the most devastating diseases,” he said.

The agreement in principle includes setting up domestic manufacturing of mRNA vaccines, which can rapidly be adapted to address outbreaks of novel pathogens.

The Covid-19 pandemic highlighted the importance of homegrown supply of vaccines, as governments including the US and India restricted their exports.

The government said it had invested £395mn in securing and scaling up the country’s drug manufacturing capabilities since the start of the pandemic. But it has also sold part of its flagship vaccine manufacturing centre.

Javid made clear that the government views the investment as a key part of its post-Brexit life sciences strategy. Under the deal, Moderna will conduct a large proportion of its clinical trials in the UK.

Ministers regard the cradle-to-grave patient records generated by the taxpayer-funded NHS, which cares for Britons throughout their lives, as a significant incentive for companies to invest in the country.

Stéphane Bancel, Moderna’s chief executive, said the UK had established a “world-class life sciences and research community”. Moderna will also build a facility to allow university researchers access to its mRNA platform.

“We are committed to global public health, and as we continue to expand internationally, we are pleased to bring local mRNA manufacturing to the UK,” he said.

Javid said one of the lessons of the pandemic was making sure the country was more resilient. “There will be future pandemics,” he said. “None of us knows exactly what, when and how.”