Oxford University and AstraZeneca have partnered together to develop a vaccine - The pharmaceutical company aims to deliver 30 million Covid-19 vaccine doses for the UK by September. Reuters
Oxford University and AstraZeneca have partnered together to develop a vaccine - The pharmaceutical company aims to deliver 30 million Covid-19 vaccine doses for the UK by September. Reuters
Oxford University and AstraZeneca have partnered together to develop a vaccine - The pharmaceutical company aims to deliver 30 million Covid-19 vaccine doses for the UK by September. Reuters
Oxford University and AstraZeneca have partnered together to develop a vaccine - The pharmaceutical company aims to deliver 30 million Covid-19 vaccine doses for the UK by September. Reuters

AstraZeneca targets 30 million Covid-19 vaccine doses for the UK by September


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AstraZeneca will make as many as 30 million doses of a Covid-19 vaccine available to the UK by September and has committed to delivering 100 million doses this year. The UK will be the first country to get access to the vaccine should it be successful.

The vaccine being developed at the University of Oxford will get £65.5 million (Dh290m) of funding, UK Business Secretary Alok Sharma said in a statement. The inoculation is already being studied in humans and could reach late-stage trials by the middle of the year. Another £18.5m will go to Imperial College London as trials accelerate.

Drug makers are scaling up to make a Covid-19 vaccine before the shots are fully tested, so inoculations will be ready as soon as possible. No vaccine exists yet for the Covid-19, which has killed more than 315,000 people globally and infected 4.7 million, according to the Johns Hopkins University, which is tracking the disease globally. The UK has the second-deadliest outbreak after the US.

The pandemic is sparking a race for a vaccine that could leave poorer nations behind. French pharmaceutical firm Sanofi sparked outrage last week after suggesting that the US may get its vaccine first. Sanofi said later that its vaccine would be available to everyone.

Although developers globally are working on as many as 100 experimental vaccines for Covid-19, there is no guarantee of success. Finding a vaccine and distributing it globally will be a “massive moonshot” and the world needs to learn to live with a virus that “may never go away”, Dr Michael Ryan, an executive of director of the World Health Organisation said last week.

Earlier, the UK government said a vaccine production facility will open in the summer of 2021, a year earlier than previously planned, after receiving a total of £131m in government funding to accelerate development.

The UK Vaccine Manufacturing and Innovation Centre will be capable of producing 70 million vaccine doses within four to six months of opening its permanent facility at Harwell campus in Oxfordshire, the centre said in a statement.

The project, which is a non-profit partnership between the University of Oxford, Imperial College and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, also plans to set up a temporary rapid deployment facility so that production could start as soon as a Covid-19 vaccine is discovered.

The UK government has granted the project £93m to accelerate the opening of the permanent site by 12 months, as well as £38m for the rapid deployment facility.

"I said we would throw everything we could at finding a vaccine," Prime Minister Boris Johnson said of the new funding. "There remains a very long way to go, and I must be frank that a vaccine might not come to fruition. But we are leading the global effort," he made the remarks in an op-ed article published in the Mail on Sunday newspaper.

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Chatham House Rule

A mark of Chatham House’s influence 100 years on since its founding,  was Moscow’s formal declaration last month that it was an “undesirable
organisation”. 

 

The depth of knowledge and academics that it drew on
following the Ukraine invasion had broadcast Mr Putin’s chicanery.  

 

The institute is more used to accommodating world leaders,
with Nelson Mandela, Margaret Thatcher among those helping it provide
authoritative commentary on world events. 

 

Chatham House was formally founded as the Royal Institute of
International Affairs following the peace conferences of World War One. Its
founder, Lionel Curtis, wanted a more scientific examination of international affairs
with a transparent exchange of information and ideas.  

 

That arena of debate and analysis was enhanced by the “Chatham
House Rule” states that the contents of any meeting can be discussed outside Chatham
House but no mention can be made identifying individuals who commented.  

 

This has enabled some candid exchanges on difficult subjects
allowing a greater degree of free speech from high-ranking figures.  

 

These meetings are highly valued, so much so that
ambassadors reported them in secret diplomatic cables that – when they were
revealed in the Wikileaks reporting – were thus found to have broken the rule. However,
most speeches are held on the record.  

 

Its research and debate has offered fresh ideas to
policymakers enabling them to more coherently address troubling issues from climate
change to health and food security.