Audio By Carbonatix
President Nana Akufo-Addo says government aims at building a domestic Covid-19 vaccine manufacturing plant in the next two years.
According to him, the plant would serve the purpose of filling, finishing and packaging Covid-19 vaccines and other vaccines.
He added that this would help “to strengthen research and development for vaccine production.”
Speaking at a Covid-19 forum in Germany, President Akufo-Addo said Ghana is ready to help fight the pandemic on the African continent, hence the establishment of the local vaccine plant in Ghana.
This is expected to be the first step in the chain of domestic vaccine production, which will improve vaccine supply in Africa.
The goal of vaccine production comes in the wake of a collaboration between Ghana, Senegal, Rwanda and Germany Biotechnology Company, BioNTech SE, to fill, finish, and package BioNTech mRNA vaccines in Africa for the treatment of viruses as well as tuberculosis and malaria.
The agreement came after a meeting in Marburg, Germany, on Wednesday, where President Akufo-Addo, together with Presidents Macky Sall and Paul Kagame of the Republics of Senegal and Rwanda respectively, witnessed the presentation of a BioNtech modular production facility solution for the production of mRNA vaccines in Africa.
“I will on 16th February together with His Excellency, Monsieur Macky Sall, President of the Republic of Senegal and His Excellency Mr Paul Kagame, President of the Republic of Rwanda inspect in Marburg Germany the production facilities that we need to employ to this end.
“And then to build a pan African project with these two sister African states where initially the fill and finish plant will be located in Ghana,” Akufo-Addo said at the opening of the New Year School at the University of Ghana (UG).
Government also plans to invest $25 million as seed money towards the establishment of a National Vaccine Institute to spearhead the country’s efforts at producing vaccines locally.
The Institute will also work on vaccine research and development in Ghana, as well as on developing a human resource base for vaccine discovery, development, and manufacturing.
The institute's establishment is one of the recommendations made by a government-appointed committee charged with developing a concrete plan for vaccine development and manufacturing in Ghana.
The Presidential Vaccine Manufacturing Committee has already indicated that Ghana would need $200 million to fully manufacture Covid-19 vaccines locally.
Latest Stories
-
Obuobia Darko-Opoku to champion sustainable financing for specialised healthcare at Ghana–UK Investment Summit 2026
1 minute -
St. Elizabeth Hospital launches fundraising drive for emergency ward expansion and modern equipment
8 minutes -
‘SEEN’: Stephen Nyamekye’s new exhibition shines spotlight on Ghana’s unsung workers
9 minutes -
Huge blast kills dozens in rebel-held village in Myanmar
10 minutes -
Officials behind Weija spillway permits will be sacked – Mahama
44 minutes -
Energy sector still needed GH¢12.9bn in gov’t support despite higher ESLA levy in 2025 – Finance Ministry
45 minutes -
Fidelity Bank deepens growth Momentum with Strong 2025 Performance
48 minutes -
Ghana, South Korea sign visa waiver deal for diplomatic and service passport holders
51 minutes -
Accra Academy @ 95: Nana Oye celebrates legacy, backs major infrastructure drive
55 minutes -
Foreign national killed after being hit by bus at Pedu Junction
1 hour -
Speaker Bagbin to convene African parliamentary leaders at 10th GITFiC in Accra
1 hour -
NPA urges motorists to verify fuel purchases, demand receipts
1 hour -
Daniel Acquaye leads Agri-Impact Delegation to Ghana-UK Investment Summit in London
1 hour -
Anti-LGBTQ Bill: Brace up for consequences – Ho Central MP to Ghanaians
1 hour -
Xenophobic attacks threaten Africa’s unity agenda – Mahama
1 hour