Speaking at Monash University’s Clayton campus on Thursday morning,Prime Minister Scott Morrison said “mRNA before the pandemic began was largely looked on as almost science fiction,and now it’s a science reality”.
“And it’s a science reality here in manufacturing in Australia. There are a few countries in the world that have been able to get to this point through the course of the pandemic,and certainly none in the southern hemisphere.”
The Morrison government inDecember announced it had entered into an in-principle agreement with Moderna and the Victorian government. Thursday’s announcement was to mark the signing of contracts between the Commonwealth and the pharmaceutical giant,but Premier Daniel Andrews was not at the press conference despite the significance of the deal to Victoria and his government.
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Put simply,mRNA teaches human cells how to make copies of the spike protein that triggers an immune response to fight off an illness.
The Melbourne facility will produce respiratory vaccines for potential future pandemics,as well as influenza,COVID-19 and seasonal influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). Construction will begin by the end of this year and manufacturing from 2024.
Moderna Australia and New Zealand general manager Michael Azrak said the company was working on a combined COVID-19 and influenza vaccine to be potentially manufactured within the next few years.