Together with their team, Professor Dr. Uğur Şahin, CEO and co-founder of BioNTech, and Dr. Özlem Türeci, Chief Medical Officer and also co-founder, have provided an unspeakably great service to hundreds of millions of people in a vastly changed world. The co-founders of the Mainz-based biopharma company and their team made a significant contribution to the containment of the COVID-19 pandemic by developing the first mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccine. For this achievement, the partners of the German Founders’ Prize — stern, Sparkassen, ZDF and Porsche — awarded the two researchers and co-founders, as well as their entire team, the Special Prize of the German Founders’ Prize on Tuesday [Sept. 14, 2021] in the ZDF capital city studio.
As part of this year’s German Founders Award ceremony, the co-founders conducted a short interview with presenter Barbara Hahlweg via video feed to the ZDF capital studio for the award acceptance.
“We are particularly pleased about the German Founders’ Prize because it underscores how important innovation and science are in achieving noble goals — in this case, in helping to stem the Corona pandemic. In addition, the award emphasizes the importance of spirited and consistent entrepreneurship.”
- Dr. Özlem Türeci
Addressing the vision for starting his own business, Professor Dr. Uğur Şahin said, “While we were working as doctors, we found that we could not help patients with the available resources as well as science could make it possible. We were looking for a way to bring our scientific ideas to patients. It became apparent that this would not be possible in a purely academic setting. We decided to incorporate to be able to realize our vision.”
Before founding the company in 2008, the pair of researchers had founded Ganymed Pharmaceuticals, a biopharmaceutical company, to develop new antibody-based cancer therapies. In 2016, Sahin and Türeci sold their first Unicorn to Japanese pharmaceutical company Astellas. The group also initially focused on cancer research, based on four complementary drug classes. The company’s proprietary mRNA technology is the most advanced of the four classes. The goal was and is to develop innovative individualized therapies for people with cancer. Meanwhile, the company is also researching vaccines and therapies in the field of infectious diseases and autoimmune diseases.
At the first signs of an emerging COVID-19 pandemic, BioNTech decided to do its part by developing a vaccine based on the company’s proprietary mRNA technology, and within a very short period of time, raised resources for this endeavor, which was later named “Project Lightspeed”. In less than a year, the Group worked with U.S. pharmaceutical company Pfizer to develop an effective and well-tolerated COVID-19 vaccine and make it available to people worldwide. The vaccine was the first mRNA-based vaccine ever approved for the market — the birth of a new class of drugs. The world-renowned vaccine has now been administered hundreds of millions of times. A total of 3 billion doses are expected to be produced by the end of the year, and 1.4 billion have already been delivered to more than 100 countries and regions around the world. This will protect more than 15 percent of the world’s population from contracting COVID-19. The success of the vaccine allows BioNTech to accelerate additional programs. In August, the company announced it was developing an mRNA-based vaccine against malaria — a disease that killed nearly 400,000 thousand people in 2019, according to WHO.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the company was known only among experts. The company is now highly traded on the stock market — in August, its market value cracked the $100 billion mark. The Mainz-based company now employs more than 2,500 people worldwide, with offices in several German cities, the United States, the United Kingdom and soon Singapore. In addition, BioNTech is investing in the expansion of its own production network. The goal is not only to build regional and global capacities for the growing pipeline of product candidates, but also, in particular, to contribute to the democratization of medicine and healthcare. In addition to an mRNA production facility in Singapore for the Southeast Asia region, the company also plans to build production capacity on the African continent.
The partner representatives of stern, Sparkassen, ZDF and Porsche honored the expertise, commitment, as well as the unbridled research drive with which Dr. Özlem Türeci and Professor Dr. Uğur Şahin and their team have implemented their goal of developing an effective and well-tolerated COVID-19 vaccine as quickly as possible with the special award of the German Founders’ Prize. In addition to the research work, he said, an equally great achievement was to network investors, companies as partners, suppliers and producers in such a way that production and distribution of the vaccine are also possible quickly, effectively and safely. The special prize of the German Founders’ Award is awarded to the two co-founders and their entire team because they show what science and innovation can achieve.