Moderna CEO hopes for booster vaccine for Covid variants from late summer

- Stephane Bancel said that manufacturers should focus on producing as many vaccines as possible this year, but the world faces a potential surplus next year in capacity
Moderna's CEO Stéphane Bancel on Friday said the company was working hard to have a booster vaccine against coronavirus variants approved by the late summer or early autumn.
Speaking at a virtual event on vaccine manufacturing, Stephane Bancel said that manufacturers should focus on producing as many vaccines as possible this year, but the world faces a potential surplus next year in capacity.
He said that additional technology transfers might dent their ability to meet production targets. Moderna is on track to make up to 1 billion doses this year and 1.4 billion next year.
"Next year there is going to be way too many vaccines for people on the planet," he said.
Bancel, asked about shortages of workers at the Lonza factory at Visp in the Swiss canton of Valais, which has a licence to make ingredients for its COVID-19 vaccine, but was confident that Lonza would close the gap there soon.
He also said that Moderna was in talks with the COVAX vaccine-sharing facility which is providing doses to lower income countries, adding: "I hope we are in the final stretch to get an agreement with COVAX."
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