<p>Vaccine major Serum Institute of India on Sunday said it plans to start production of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Oxford University in the next two to three weeks and hopes to bring it to the market by October if the human clinical trials are successful.</p>.<p><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-live-updates-all-doctors-and-hospitals-to-light-a-candle-at-9pm-on-april-22-as-protest-says-ima-827545.html"><b>Track live updates on coronavirus here</b></a></p>.<p>The Pune-based company has partnered with Oxford University as one of the seven global institutions manufacturing the vaccine.</p>.<p>"Our team has been working closely with Dr Hill from Oxford University, and we are expecting to initiate production of the vaccine in 2-3 weeks and produce 5 million doses per month for the first 6 months, following which, we hope to scale up production to 10 million doses per month," Serum Institute India (SII) CEO Adar Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>SII has collaborated with scientists at Oxford University for a malaria vaccine project in the past and can say with certainty that they are some of the best scientists, he added.</p>.<p>"We expect the (COVID-19) vaccine to be out in the market by September - October, only if the trials are successful with the requisite safety and assured efficacy. We will be starting trials in India for this vaccine hopefully over the next 2-3 weeks' time," Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>SII will be manufacturing the vaccine in anticipation of clinical trials succeeding by September - October in the UK, he added.</p>.<p>"Following that, we have undertaken the decision to initiate manufacturing at our own risk. The decision has been solely taken to have a jump-start on manufacturing, to have enough doses available, if the clinical trials prove successful," Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>The company plans to initiate the trials in India for the vaccine with necessary regulatory approvals, which are underway presently.</p>.<p>"Keeping the current situation in mind, we have funded this endeavour at a personal capacity and hopefully will be able to enlist the support of other partners to further scale-up the vaccine production," Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>The vaccines will be manufactured at the company's facility in Pune. Building a new facility for COVID-19 vaccine would have taken around 2-3 years, he added.</p>.<p>The Indian regulatory authorities are working with the company to ensure smooth procedural functioning. "We are in touch with the Department of Biotechnology (DBT) and ICMR," Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>The company had earlier said it will not patent any COVID-19 vaccine which it develops.</p>.<p>Asked about the decision, Poonawalla reiterated, "We will not patent Serum's vaccine for COVID-19 and will make it available for all to produce and sell, not just in India but across the world."</p>.<p>Whosoever makes and develops the vaccine will need multiple partners to manufacture the vaccine, he added.</p>.<p>"I hope that whichever company develops the vaccine does not get it patented and makes it available based on royalties or a commercial understanding to as many manufacturers across the world to make billions of dosages at a fast pace," Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>Death toll due to COVID-19 has crossed 200,000 globally, with the number of infections at over 2.8 million.</p>.<p>In India, the coronavirus has claimed over 800 lives and the number of cases has crossed the 26,000-mark.</p>
<p>Vaccine major Serum Institute of India on Sunday said it plans to start production of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Oxford University in the next two to three weeks and hopes to bring it to the market by October if the human clinical trials are successful.</p>.<p><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-live-updates-all-doctors-and-hospitals-to-light-a-candle-at-9pm-on-april-22-as-protest-says-ima-827545.html"><b>Track live updates on coronavirus here</b></a></p>.<p>The Pune-based company has partnered with Oxford University as one of the seven global institutions manufacturing the vaccine.</p>.<p>"Our team has been working closely with Dr Hill from Oxford University, and we are expecting to initiate production of the vaccine in 2-3 weeks and produce 5 million doses per month for the first 6 months, following which, we hope to scale up production to 10 million doses per month," Serum Institute India (SII) CEO Adar Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>SII has collaborated with scientists at Oxford University for a malaria vaccine project in the past and can say with certainty that they are some of the best scientists, he added.</p>.<p>"We expect the (COVID-19) vaccine to be out in the market by September - October, only if the trials are successful with the requisite safety and assured efficacy. We will be starting trials in India for this vaccine hopefully over the next 2-3 weeks' time," Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>SII will be manufacturing the vaccine in anticipation of clinical trials succeeding by September - October in the UK, he added.</p>.<p>"Following that, we have undertaken the decision to initiate manufacturing at our own risk. The decision has been solely taken to have a jump-start on manufacturing, to have enough doses available, if the clinical trials prove successful," Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>The company plans to initiate the trials in India for the vaccine with necessary regulatory approvals, which are underway presently.</p>.<p>"Keeping the current situation in mind, we have funded this endeavour at a personal capacity and hopefully will be able to enlist the support of other partners to further scale-up the vaccine production," Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>The vaccines will be manufactured at the company's facility in Pune. Building a new facility for COVID-19 vaccine would have taken around 2-3 years, he added.</p>.<p>The Indian regulatory authorities are working with the company to ensure smooth procedural functioning. "We are in touch with the Department of Biotechnology (DBT) and ICMR," Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>The company had earlier said it will not patent any COVID-19 vaccine which it develops.</p>.<p>Asked about the decision, Poonawalla reiterated, "We will not patent Serum's vaccine for COVID-19 and will make it available for all to produce and sell, not just in India but across the world."</p>.<p>Whosoever makes and develops the vaccine will need multiple partners to manufacture the vaccine, he added.</p>.<p>"I hope that whichever company develops the vaccine does not get it patented and makes it available based on royalties or a commercial understanding to as many manufacturers across the world to make billions of dosages at a fast pace," Poonawalla said.</p>.<p>Death toll due to COVID-19 has crossed 200,000 globally, with the number of infections at over 2.8 million.</p>.<p>In India, the coronavirus has claimed over 800 lives and the number of cases has crossed the 26,000-mark.</p>