Business Standard

Covid vaccine journey takes off

5.6 million doses were shipped to 13 cities on Tuesday

- BS REPORTERS Pune/ New Delhi/ Mumbai/ Bengaluru, 12 January

Three temperatur­e-controlled trucks filled with Covid-19 vaccine vials pulled out of Serum Institute’s production plant in Pune at 5 a.m on Tuesday, marking the start of a mega immunisati­on drive in the country. The jabs will be administer­ed beginning January 16.

The trucks that headed to the Pune Airport were specially designed containers equipped with sensors monitoring location, temperatur­e, light exposure and unusual jolting. The first flight to ship out the vaccine to Delhi was a Spicejet Boeing-737 carrying 22 boxes. Each box weighing 32 kg contained around 12,000 doses of Covishield vaccines and gel packs- a portable plastic bag filled with refrigeran­t gel. A Goair flight to Chennai followed shortly.

In all, nine flights transporte­d over 5.6 million doses of the vaccine to 13 cities across the country, prompting civil aviation minister Hardeep Singh Puri’s office to compare the effort to Hanuman carrying Sanjeevani from the Himalayas. Videh Kumar Jaipuriar, CEO of Delhi Internatio­nal Airport, summed up the exercise. ‘’We have synergized, collaborat­ed over multiple months with exporters, importers, logistic companies, freight forwarders, government, police to ensure faster turnaround for vaccines.’’

The air cargo terminals at the airport would work 24x7 to support the vaccine movement. As the Spicejet aircraft landed in Delhi after a two-hour flight, the vaccine boxes were transporte­d by cool dollies to warehouses which can maintain a capacity of 5.7 million vials a day.

After the first lot of doses landed in four major zonal centres--delhi, Kolkata, Bengaluru and Chennai--these were trucked to hospitals from where it would be distribute­d to thousands of nursing homes, hospitals and dispensari­es across 718 districts. Vaccines arriving in Delhi and other hubs get the fast-lane treatment meant for priority packages, with an early delivery commitment the following day. That’s part of the logistics worked out for the vaccine transporta­tion.

Kunal Agarwal, co-founder at Kool-ex Cold Chain, however, said, “for us, carrying this vaccine is just a new product in our business which we have been doing for years. Whether Serum or Bharat Biotech, these are our old clients. Our trucks are bulk carriers of vaccines and are meant for long haul transport.’’ Truck fleets that work with pharmaceut­ical companies typically go through quality audits and certificat­ions. On a day with back to back vaccine-related activities, a Kool-ex truck carried the vials from Delhi Airport to the Rajiv Gandhi Super Specialty Hospital (RGSSH), some 36 km away from the airport in the afternoon.

RGSSH, a key Covid facility in Delhi, is doubling up as a vaccine storage centre. “We have installed 90 deep freeze refrigerat­ors in the last one month which will help us to maintain temperatur­e between 2 and 8 degree Celsius. The freezers will give a warning beep sound in case temperatur­e rises above 8 degree,” said Dr Chhavi Gupta, spokespers­on at RGSSH.

Unlike the Pfizer vaccine requiring ultra low temperatur­e, the Serum vaccine can be stored at 2-8 degrees. Even so, dry ice or refrigeran­t gel packs are a must. Nirbhik Narang, head of cargo division for stateowned Air India, which flew 23 boxes of vaccines to Ahmedabad, explained, ‘’we are packing the vaccines in gel packs as that is sufficient to maintain the required temperatur­e for Covishield. When they are exported internatio­nally, we may have to use dry ice,” he said.

As the vaccinatio­n day nears, planning is being stepped up for a complicate­d supply chain network comprising factory workers, truck drivers, pilots, bureaucrat­s, police, pharmacist­s and health-care workers to converge seamlessly, officials said.

But, there are worries around a patchy internet network—a hurdle for the Co-win platform that’s at the core of tracking the vaccine delivery. As a doctor from a public hospital in Ghaziabad pointed out, the dry run had to be halted due to internet glitches.

There could be other issues as well like weather or mechanical problems. The process will become more complex as distributi­on moves from large urban and suburban areas to more remote locations with smaller population­s, as was the case in Agartala, capital of Tripura, on Tuesday. It received only 100 dosages as one of the flights that was supposed to carry the vaccine was cancelled due to poor weather, a state government official said. But the day one of the vaccine movement was termed successful by bureaucrat­s.

“We can say that we have won the first round. Flights out of Pune have seamlessly transporte­d out the vaccines. Priority take-off and landing status was given. Vaccines were loaded last, so that it can be unloaded first at the destinatio­n airport. Now off to the second stage,” said an official involved in the logistics process.

 ?? PHOTO: TWITTER/ADAR POONAWALLA ?? Adar Poonawalla, CEO of Serum Institute of India, before the first shipment of Covishield leaves the firm’s Pune plant
PHOTO: TWITTER/ADAR POONAWALLA Adar Poonawalla, CEO of Serum Institute of India, before the first shipment of Covishield leaves the firm’s Pune plant

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