Apparently determined by factors including ease of spread (contagion level), vaccine efficacy, perhaps seasonal variation, etc.
I can't review / interpret the data with you here yet (until we post the data).
But $zero% means a global conspiracy of $Billion $Dollar proportion. Not only the vaccine costs, but economic impact of employee sick time, etc. Not plausible.
ps
Please correct / clarify:
I vaguely recall the Human Genome Project was announced, projected to take a real long time.
Part way through an innovation was introduced that substantially reduced the remaining time to completion. Was that innovation mRNA? In any case iirc it was President Clinton that approved the shortcut.
The number needed for herd immunity is based on how deadly and how infectious.
So they do know with covid, and they estimate exactly 72%.
There is no such thing as "vaccine efficacy".
It either is a real vaccine and works, or it is fake, like the mRNA, and it does not.
The conspiracy is not global because no one but the US used the mRNA fakes by Moderna and Pfizer.
And it is more than a 1 billion dollar fraud, but over $90 billion in profits to Pfizer and Moderna.
Here is on the human gnome project.
{...
Two technologies enabled the project:
gene mapping and
DNA sequencing. The gene mapping technique of
restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) arose from the search for the location of the breast cancer gene by Mark Skolnick of the University of Utah, which began in 1974.
Seeing a linkage marker for the gene, in collaboration with
David Botstein,
Ray White and
Ron Davis conceived of a way to construct a
genetic linkage map of the human genome. This enabled scientists to launch the larger human genome effort.
Because of widespread international cooperation and advances in the field of
genomics (especially in
sequence analysis), as well as parallel advances in computing technology, a 'rough draft' of the genome was finished in 2000 (announced jointly by US President
Bill Clinton and British Prime Minister
Tony Blair on 26 June 2000).
This first available rough draft
assembly of the genome was completed by the Genome Bioinformatics Group at the
University of California, Santa Cruz, primarily led by then-graduate student
Jim Kent and his advisor
David Haussler.
Ongoing sequencing led to the announcement of the essentially complete genome on 14 April 2003, two years earlier than planned.
In May 2006, another milestone was passed on the way to completion of the project when the sequence of the
very last chromosome was published in
Nature.
...}
mRNA is not for reading DNA but for reprogramming ribosome in our cells, in order to make the cell grow proteins.
This is used to repair cells that are protein deficient.
There is no way to use that as a vaccine.