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Germany: COVID-19 vaccine available by mid-2021

September 15, 2020

The German government is expecting a COVID-19 vaccine to be available for parts of the population early next year. Three firms are to be subsidized by the government to research potential vaccines.

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German Health Minister Jens Spahn
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Kappeler

German Health Minister Jens Spahn and Research Minister Anja Karliczek said at a Berlin press conference on Tuesday that they expected a COVID-19 vaccine to be ready next year, as they announced that research by three German companies was currently being funded.

But the ministers both warned that "risky shortcuts" would not be taken, that a vaccine would not be available to most the population until the middle of next year. "We want a safe and effective vaccine, not necessarily to be the first," Spahn said.

"Safety has absolute priority on this point," Karliczek said.

Read more:Inside the heart of Germany's coronavirus pandemic

The two ministers also announced that Germany's special €750 million ($890 million) research fund for a coronavirus vaccine would mainly be invested in three companies: BioNTech, CureVac, and IDT Biologika.

The Mainz-based BioNTech is set to receive €375 million, while the Tübingen-based CureVac was expected to receive €252 million. Negotiations with IDT Biologika, in Dessau, eastern Germany, are still ongoing.

"The subsidy is an important contribution to accelerating the development and expansion of production capacities of a COVID-19 vaccination," BioNTech CEO Ugur Sahin said in a statement.

Both BioNTech and CureVac are working on a so-called "messenger RNA" (mRNA) vaccine - a single-stranded molecule that provides human cells with the information to produce the necessary proteins to fight the infection. The mRNA vaccine is thought to be quicker to develop and produce than others.

bk/msh (dpa, Reuters)