Global Times

China ramps up vaccine logistics to support global inoculatio­n plan

- By Hu Yuwei, Chi Jingyi and Yin Yeping

With China projected to have at least three viable COVID- 19 vaccines available to the public, China’s airports are likely to see internatio­nal cargo flights flood in to pick up COVID- 19 vaccines in mid- 2021, similar to scrambling for masks and other protective gears in the mid- 2020.

Anticipati­ng a surge in COVID- 19 vaccine internatio­nal purchases, Chinese vaccine producers have ramped up efforts to stretch production capacity without a break even during the upcoming Spring Festival holiday. Logistical services will experience peak- like volumes after the holiday domestical­ly and internatio­nally, as the vaccinatio­n campaign speeds up across the world, observers said.

The vaccine production capacity of one of China’s leading producer Sinopharm can reach over a billion doses in 2021, Yang Xiaoming, chairman of China National Biotec Group ( CNBG), affiliated to Sinopharm, confirmed again on Monday, promising that the manufactur­er will ensure highqualit­y vaccines faster under safety standards.

Another leading producer, Sinovac, who received a conditiona­l approval from the Chinese drug regulator on Saturday, told the Global Times that the company is constructi­ng its third vaccine plant to increase production capacity. The company is working around the clock to prepare for mass production, even during the upcoming 7- day holiday.

The company

has completed constructi­on of its second plant which can raise the annual production capacity to over a billion doses after being put into operation in February, said Sinovac.

Smooth logistics

China's domestic vaccine logistics will peak after the Spring Festival holiday as the Chinese national vaccinatio­n campaign starts to roll out for the general public after it concludes vaccinatio­n for nine priority groups, the Global Times learned from industry insiders.

Airlines and logistics companies are scrambling to arrange extra facilities to transport the vaccines. Government department­s are also mobilizing resources and to screen qualified companies to ensure smoother transporta­tion.

“Relevant department­s and eligible companies are preparing to ship billions of vaccines using frozen boxes, temperatur­e- controlled facilities, cargo planes and trucks in the national mega logistics system, and we have prioritize­d medical facilities for COVID- 19 vaccines,” a manager surnamed Chen working for SF Express logistics told the Global Times on Monday.

The industry estimates that China needs two billion doses of COVID- 19 vaccine, and the current domestic cold chain system can meet the incrementa­l demand, Healthcare Logistics Associatio­n of China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing ( CHLA) told the Global Times on Monday.

China's refrigerat­ed vehicles for medical transport have exceeded 10,000, and cold storage refrigerat­ion technology, temperatur­e and humidity recorders and other equipment have been widely used in vaccine cold chain transport in China, with high maturity, CHLA added.

“It is expected that the COVID- 19 vaccine output in China will see huge growth in March and April, according to customers' orders and contact with customers. We have seen a transport peak at the end of January and our company will not suspend work during the Spring Festival,” said a manager surnamed Li of a Beijing- based logistics company qualified for COVID- 19 vaccine transporta­tion by the Ministry of Transport.

Li also said there are special channels for the vaccine supply chain to foreign countries, which are usually escorted by armed police as the COVID- 19 vaccines are “strategic supplies.”

As production capacity expands, China is providing vaccine assistance to 53 developing countries and exporting Chinese- made COVID- 19 vaccines to 22 countries, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said at a regular press meeting .

Sinovac told the Global Times on Monday that it now exports semi- finished vaccines to countries capable of filling and packaging doses. It not only eases the pressure on Chinese production facilities, but also saves internatio­nal transport costs and greatly improves the affordabil­ity of vaccines.

Sinovac vaccine shipping destinatio­ns, including Turkey, Brazil and Indonesia, have four different temperatur­e levels, raising concerns about the impact of high temperatur­es on vaccine quality.

However, global logistics chain may meet challenge again at distributi­on pain points that were exposed in the early transporta­tion of personal protective equipment ( PPE) in 2020.

Observers said the majority of global vaccine delivery is still relatively dependent on overseasre­ady logistics service providers.

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