Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

RIL eyes tie-ups to enter diagnostic­s biz

- Kalpana Pathak kalpana.p@livemint.com

THE BIOTECHNOL­OGY SUBSIDIARY OF RIL PLANS TO START PATHOLOGY LABS ACROSS INDIA THROUGH PARTNERSHI­PS WITH LOCAL ENTREPRENE­URS

MUMBAI: Mukesh Ambani, India’s richest man, now wants a share of your diagnostic­s budget, in a move that can potentiall­y shake up the sector similar to the disruption in telecom market after the entry of Reliance Jio.

Reliance Life Sciences or RLS, the biotechnol­ogy subsidiary of RIL, plans to start pathology labs across India through partnershi­ps with local entreprene­urs, said two people aware of the developmen­t. RLS is controlled by the Ambani family, the promoter group of RIL.

“RLS is trying to build a network of pathology labs. To begin with, they plan to set up 20-30 labs,” said the first person, who has received a partnershi­p proposal from RLS. He said RLS is looking at a 15:85 ratio for revenue sharing, with RLS keeping 15%.

“Revenue sharing would be on net sales basis and the franchise would bear the cost of setting up the labs,” the person said.

In an emailed response, a spokespers­on for RIL said, “The informatio­n you have is speculativ­e.” The entry of Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd, an RIL subsidiary, in September 2016 caused a massive disruption in the mobile telecom market with low-cost tariff and data plans. This forced an industry-wide consolidat­ion leaving only three private telcos, including Bharti Airtel and Vodafone Idea Ltd, the merged entity of Vodafone and Idea.

The RLS website says the company is developing business opportunit­ies in bio-therapeuti­cs (plasma proteins, biosimilar­s and novel proteins), pharmaceut­icals (later-generation, oncology generics), clinical research services, regenerati­ve medicine (stem cell therapies) and molecular medicine.

The company plans to follow a hub-and-spoke model for its pathology business, with a reference lab serving as a regional hub providing super-specialize­d tests. Supporting the reference lab would be a chain of network labs that would provide routine as well as specialise­d tests. And assisting the network labs would be collection centres and points which will collect tests and send them to reference and network labs for processing.

“RLS is selling it as a low investment-high return entreprene­urial joint venture. It has approached a number of players in the industry to partner with them to set up these labs,” said the second person cited above.

The company would also collaborat­e with doctors, local collection centres, pathology labs and hospitals to bring in additional business.

RLS operates a state-of-the-art facility in the life sciences domain. Its flagship facility is the Dhirubhai Ambani Life Sciences Centre (DALC) in Navi Mumbai, Maharashtr­a.

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