Ramaphosa, billionaire Soon-Shiong open NantSA vaccine production campus in Cape Town

19th January 2022 By: Irma Venter - Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

Ramaphosa, billionaire Soon-Shiong open NantSA vaccine production campus in Cape Town

President Cyril Ramaphosa and Dr Patrick Soon-Shiong cut the ribbon on the NantSA facility

The NantSA vaccine manufacturing campus at Brackengate, in Cape Town, could soon produce its first Covid-19 vaccine, says NantWorks founder and CEO Dr Patrick Soon-Shiong.

President Cyril Ramaphosa and Soon-Shiong on Wednesday officially opened the NantSA facility.

Billionaire Soon-Shiong was born in South Africa to Chinese immigrant parents. He qualified as a doctor at the University of the Witwatersrand and then moved during the Apartheid-era to the US where he subsequently built a medical and business empire.

NantWorks is a network of healthcare, biotech and artificial intelligence startups.

“We are moving at lighting speed. We hope that within the year, quite literally within the year, the first drug substance [active ingredient] will be produced in this facility,” said Soon-Shiong at the ribbon-cutting ceremony.

President Ramaphosa noted this was the first vaccine facility in Africa that would produce drug substances, as the other facilities in the country used imported drug substances, and then acted as fill-and-finish facilities.

“The demand we have been making with the World Trade Organisation is that we want those countries that have the capacity to manufacture the drug substance to transfer their technology so that we are able to manufacture the drug substance ourselves,” he noted.

“This is where the real challenge is: We want to migrate from just fill-and-finish to manufacturing the drug substance ourselves.”

“This state-of-the-art vaccine manufacturing campus officially launching today is part of a broader initiative to propel Africa into the new era of health science,” added Ramaphosa.

“South Africa supports vaccine manufacturing to ensure we become self-sufficient as a continent; that we shed those colonial chains that have always bound us.

“Africa should not be last in line to receive vaccines against pandemics. Africa should no longer go cap in hand to the western world begging and begging for vaccines that they just want to drip off their tables,” he said.

The NantSA facility is part of a R4-billion-plus investment by Soon-Shiong and his family in South Africa, both on a business and philanthropic level.

The facility, set to employ between 400 and 600 people, would focus on a new generation of vaccines, explained Soon-Shiong. It was not an antibody-based vaccine, but a combination of an antibody and T-cell-based vaccine.

The ambition is to “kill the factory”, he noted.

Soon-Shiong said it was too early to become complacent about Covid-19, as concerns lingered around the virus, such as a scenario where the Omicron variant, which is 75% more infectious than the more deadly Delta variant, might combine with the Delta variant.

Trials for the proposed vaccine were still being conducted worldwide, including Australia and the US.

Other vaccines to be developed at the Cape Town facility might include ones against HIV, tuberculosis and various forms of cancer.

Other regions in Africa to which Soon-Shiong wanted to expand vaccine production included Ghana, Uganda and Botswana.