Johnson & Johnson has temporarily suspended production at a key plant manufacturing the COVID-19 vaccine, the New York Times reported Tuesday.
The facility in the Dutch city of Leiden halted output late last year, according to the report, which cited people familiar with the decision.
J&J, without confirming or denying the report, said it has continued to fulfill delivery commitments, a company spokesman said.
The factory, which is currently making an experimental vaccine, is expected to resume production of the COVID-19 vaccine again in a “few” months, the Times reported.
J&J currently has “millions of doses of our COVID-19 vaccine in inventory,” according to the J&J spokesman.
“We continue to fulfill our contractual obligations in relation to the Covax facility and the African Union,” the company spokesman said.
J&J has projected sales of $3 billion to $3.5 billion in 2022 for its COVID-19 vaccine, much less than the $32 billion forecast by Pfizer for the same period.
But the J&J vaccine has been sought after in developing countries because, unlike other options, it does not require transportation at very cold temperatures. Also, the vaccine was originally billed as a single-shot inoculation.
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