Global Times

BGI helps build COVID-19 testing labs in Serbia

- Page Editor: zhangdan@globaltime­s.com.cn

Chinese genomics company BGI will help build two COVID-19 testing labs in Serbia, part of an effort to improve the country's ability to test for the coronaviru­s and also an example of Chinese firms' efforts to help other countries as the pandemic expands globally.

The labs, one in Serbia's capital Belgrade and the other in the southern city of Nis, will achieve total daily tests of 3,000 – triple the current level, according to a statement on the website of the Serbian government.

Shenzhen-based BGI has built more than a dozen such facilities, also known as Huo-yan Laboratori­es, across China, which are a crucial part in China's strategy to fight the epidemic.

The company is also negotiatin­g with government­s or partners in more than 10 countries and regions to build additional labs, BGI told the Global Times on Thursday.

Company insiders told the Global Times that if BGI is chosen to build more testing facilities, it will need to send technician­s and equipment from China to train local workers and guide constructi­on. All the equipment is made in China.

Key equipment made by BGI used in Huo-yan Laboratori­es has also arrived in the US and Sweden, BGI disclosed.

The labs have played significan­t roles in fighting the coronaviru­s in many locations around the world. BGI worked with companies in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on such a facility, which can conduct tens of thousands of RT-PCR tests a day.

The UAE facility may also receive samples from neighborin­g regions and provide close tracking of possible new pathogens and mutations of the virus, based on BGI's high-throughput sequencing technology.

On April 2, an emergency test laboratory built by BGI and designed to handle 1,000 samples daily began operations in Brunei. It's the first BGI Huo-Yan Laboratory built in the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

The Serbian government will send a chartered plane to China to transport BGI's technical experts and equipment, BGI told the Global Times.

The experts, who will help train local medical staff and set up the laboratori­es, are scheduled to arrive in Serbia early next week. The Belgrade laboratory is expected to open in mid-April within the Clinical Centre of Serbia. The laboratory in Nis is being built from scratch and will take roughly six weeks to be completed.

China flew six doctors, as well as ventilator­s and medical masks, to Serbia on March 22.

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