Coronavirus pandemic
CureVac may pick Korea as Asian base for COVID vaccine production
Expectations are high among Korean pharmas to get a CMO deal with the German company
By Jun 16, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
2
Min read
Most Read
LG Chem to sell water filter business to Glenwood PE for $692 million


KT&G eyes overseas M&A after rejecting activist fund's offer


Kyobo Life poised to buy Japan’s SBI Group-owned savings bank


StockX in merger talks with Naver’s online reseller Kream


Meritz backs half of ex-manager’s $210 mn hedge fund



German biopharmaceutical company CureVac N.V. may choose South Korea as one of its global production bases for the COVID-19 vaccine following Korean President Moon Jae-in’s request for a vaccine partnership.
President Moon, currently on an official visit to European countries, held a video conference with Franz-Werner Haas, chief executive of the German vaccine maker, in Vienna on Tuesday.
During the online meeting, the president asked him to consider Korea as a vaccine production hub in the Asia-Pacific region, promising to provide full administrative support if CureVac decides to do so.
The CureVac CEO did not give the answer right away, but noted that there are “lots of room for cooperation” given a large number of world-class pharmaceutical companies in Korea, according to the presidential office of Cheong Wa Dae.
Both sides also shared the view that the German vaccine maker needs to develop its network with pharmaceutical partners beyond Europe, it said.
CureVac develops therapies based on messenger RNA (mRNA) technology. The company is also known to be working on a second-generation vaccine for coronavirus variants.
The German company is scheduled to announce the phase three trial results of its vaccine candidate by the end of June.

WORLD’S TOP CMO FACILITIES
Industry watchers say the virtual meeting between President Moon and CureVac CEO Haas has raised expectations among Korean pharmaceutical firms that they could produce COVID-19 vaccine for the German company under a contract manufacturing organization (CMO) scheme.
In Europe, CureVac has consigned the manufacture of its vaccine to other pharmaceutical companies, including France’s Fareva, under CMO contracts.
President Moon and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have already agreed to cooperate on vaccine development and production.
Korea is already home to the world’s leading contract drug manufacturers, including Samsung Biologics.
Last month, Samsung Biologics Co. said it has signed a CMO deal to manufacture Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine from the second half of this year in Korea.
Samsung Biologics plans to expand its facilities to produce the drug substance (DS) in mRNA COVID-19 vaccines by the first half of 2022.
Under CMO contracts, SK Group affiliate SK Bioscience Co. has already been producing British-Swedish pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine since September 2020. It also inked a contract development and manufacturing organization (CDMO) order for a coronavirus vaccine candidate developed by US-based Novavax last year.

Among local pharma firms equipped with CMO facilities for mRNA vaccines is ST Pharm Co., which completed the construction of an mRNA drug substance production facility last month.
Hanmi Pharmaceutical Co. has the capacity to make up to 1 billion doses of mRNA vaccine at its plant in Pyeongtaek.
GC Pharma Corp., the distributor of Moderna’s vaccine in Korea, is also among potential candidates for the CureVac CMO supply, according to industry officials.
Write to Ju-Hyun Lee and Do-Won Lim at deep@hankyung.com
In-Soo Nam edited this article.
More to Read
-
COVID-19 vaccine partnershipSamsung Biologics to make Moderna’s mRNA vaccine from Q3
May 23, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
4 Min read -
COVID-19 vaccineSK Bioscience secures up to $173.4 mn from CEPI for vaccine development
May 24, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
3 Min read -
COVID vaccinesKorean pharmas may turn into global vaccine makers on Biden remarks
May 07, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
4 Min read -
COVID vaccineGreen Cross in talks with Russia to produce COVID-19 vaccine
Mar 18, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
3 Min read -
Celltrion eyes COVID-19 vaccine development
Feb 19, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
2 Min read
Comment 0
LOG IN