SCIENCE

Brazil’s New ‘Project Orion’ Lab is The First in World to Use Particle Accelerator on Deadliest Viruses

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Brazil’s New ‘Project Orion’ Lab is The First in World to Use Particle Accelerator on Deadliest Viruses

Brazil has officially broken ground on "Project Orion," a massive, high-security laboratory in Campinas that will become the most advanced pathogen research center in Latin America.

Scheduled to complete construction by late 2026 and become fully operational by 2028, the $200 million (R$1 billion) complex will be the world's first Maximum-Containment (BSL-4) facility directly connected to a 4th-generation particle accelerator, Sirius.

This unique connection allows scientists to use high-powered synchrotron light to "see" viruses and bacteria at an atomic level, revealing how they infect human cells in real-time. This "giant microscope" capability is a game-changer for studying high-mortality pathogens like the Sabiá virus, a deadly hemorrhagic fever native to Brazil that currently has no vaccine or cure.

By building this 30,000sqm facility, Brazil aims to secure "national sovereignty," moving away from a reliance on foreign labs in the U.S. and Europe to develop its own vaccines and treatments for regional threats.

Researchers working in the BSL-4 zone will be required to wear pressurized "Level 4" suits connected to independent air supplies, undergoing rigorous chemical decontaminations every time they exit the lab.

The facility will also feature advanced air and effluent decontamination systems to ensure that no microscopic threat ever escapes into the surrounding city of Campinas.

Project Orion is being funded as a priority by the Brazilian government’s New Growth Acceleration Program (PAC), marking a historic leap in the region's ability to respond to future pandemics and biological threats.

As construction enters its visible phase this year, the international scientific community is watching closely to see how the integration of a particle accelerator with maximum-containment biosafety will redefine the future of medicine.