Small Business

Merck, UK Trust to set up vaccine research unit

Global pharma major Merck & Co has entered into a $130 million partnership with London-based Wellcome Trust to set up a not-for-profit research company in India. Merck operates in India as MSD Pharmaceuticals Pvt Ltd. - Gates foundation exits pharma cos to enter energy - Citi"s credit losses rising: Goldman - Sanofi mulls diagnostics, animal-health buys - Merck deal puts pressure on drugmakers AstraZeneca, Sanofi, J&J - Merck arm to hire 300, expand vaccines portfolio The joint venture, the MSD Wellcome Trust Hilleman Laboratories, will focus on developing affordable vaccines to prevent diseases that commonly affect low-income countries, MSD said. Merck and the Wellcome Trust will invest equally in the R&D joint venture, which will be primed with a combined cash contribution of £90 million ($130 million) over the next seven years and will support a staff of approximately 60 researchers and developers. India has been chosen as the location due to the country’s expertise in low cost vaccine production. Naveen Rao, MD, MSD India, said the new company would be an independent entity and would turn functional as soon as it gets requisite regulatory sanctions. The profits will be ploughed back into the company for funding further research, he said. Altaf A Lal, health attaché and regional representative of the United States Department of Health and Human Services in New Delhi till now, has been appointed CEO of Hilleman. “If we are successful at building new partnerships and collaborations with governments, other companies and NGOs, I am confident that we will be successful in delivering vaccines to the people who need them,” said Lal. “This is why I am making a firm commitment as CEO of this new venture to proceed by working in concert with the global vaccine community, obtaining feedback and input at every step.”


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Bank of India Q3 net dips 53% to Rs 405 cr
Public sector lender Bank of India (BoI) today said its net profit declined by 53.50 per cent to Rs 405.50 crore for the third quarter ended December 31, over the same period corresponding fiscal.
Popular Articles

Many poverties
A contentious statement on Indian poverty, put out some years ago by Arjun Sengupta, said that 78 per cent of Indians lived on less than Rs 20 a day. That figure always looked problematic, but has become a favourite statistical weapon in the hands of the Left. So it is just as well that the Suresh Tendulkar report on poverty has effectively nailed that number. The Tendulkar report says that 25.7 per cent of urban residents are below the new definition of the poverty line, because they spend less than Rs 578.80 per month. That is Rs 19/day, close to the Sengupta benchmark. Given the urban-rural mix of 28:72, if the Sengupta claim of 78 per cent for the country as a whole (urban and rural) is correct, then 92 per cent of all rural residents would have to be consuming less than Rs 20/day.

Heavy metal
India-specific hatchbacks took centrestage at the 10th AUTO EXPO, currently on in New Delhi. But BIJOY KUMAR Y took a detour and was seduced