Global Times

Vaccine exports to bounce back

▶ Experts predict future demand to rise as new COVID variants emerge

- By Xie Jun and Yin Yeping Page Editor: xiongxinyi@ globaltime­s. com. cn

China was the No. 1 provider of coronaviru­s vaccines for the world, but recent data and reports seemed to point to a fact that there’s an ebb in its COVID- related and other vaccines in overseas markets, from early 2022 onwards.

In the eyes of industrial practition­ers and experts, this is a normal phenomenon caused by a mixture of factors, including that the range of vaccine choices on the market is expanding.

But experts have confidence that China’s COVID vaccine exports will surge this year, as China’s vaccine production capacity outweighs that of many overseas markets, and because there remains a big gap between the global vaccinated population and the target set by the World Health Organizati­on.

A drop in Q1

China’s falling COVID vaccine exports to overseas markets has caught the attention of some media. The South China Morning Post, for example, recently published a story entitled “China was the world’s biggest COVID- 19 vaccine exporter. Not anymore.”

The report cited data released by British analytics firm Airfinity as saying that overseas deliveries of Chinese vaccines made by Sinopharm, Sinovac and CanSino peaked in November at 235 million doses, with 202.9 million of them part of commercial deals.

By December, shipments of doses deliveries had dropped to 89 million but total exports were still high at 199 million. The number further dropped to 51.6 million doses in January, 36 million in February and 11.5 million in March.

There are no official figures for China’s COVID vaccine exports for the first three months this year, but data from multiple channels seem to point to a decline.

For one thing, China’s leading COVID vaccine maker Sinovac Biotech Co saw revenue and profits drop by 2.65 percent and 37.49 percent, respective­ly, on a yearly basis in the first quarter. Last year, revenues generated through exports accounted for about 43 percent of the company’s total income.

Zhang Yesui, a spokespers­on for the Fifth Session of the 13th National People’s Congress, said on March 4 that China has provided over 2.1 billion doses of COVID vaccines to more than 120 countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons, accounting for one third of the total number of vaccines administer­ed outside China. Zhang said then that China is the country providing the most COVID- 19 vaccines globally.

The statements also revealed a declining trend for COVID vaccine exports, as Chinese officials had noted in November 2021 that China would provide 2 billion doses of COVID vaccines to overseas markets in 2021. It could thus be calculated that China exported about 100 million doses in the first two months this year.

Tan Yadi, an independen­t medical commentato­r, told the Global Times that a certain domestic COVID vaccine company had laid off a good number of employees across their production lines, which showed that industrial insiders were pessimisti­c about the vaccines’ exporting potential.

One important reason behind the demand drop is that many countries have adopted so- called “herd immunity” policies, which reduced demand for vaccines.

Also, some overseas markets prefer mRNA vaccines to inactivate­d vaccines such as China’s, as they believe that the latter are effective in reducing severe cases, but not as effective as the former in preventing infections, Tao Lina, a Shanghaiba­sed medical observer, told the Global Times. Chen Jia, a research fellow with the Internatio­nal Monetary Institute of the Renmin University, neverthele­ss pointed out that apart from China, other markets’ COVID vaccine exports are also on the decline, including those developed by pharmaceut­ical giants like Pfizer and Moderna.

Incrementa­l markets

However, despite the dip in COVID vaccine exports, many experts still hold an optimistic view that China will export more of the doses in the coming months.

For one thing, the current usage rate of COVID vaccines around the globe is much lower than the 70 percent target set by the World Health Organizati­on in terms of the population coverage by mid- 2022. This means that overseas demand for Chinese- made vaccines will continue to increase, Feng Duojia, president of the China Vaccine Industry Associatio­n, told the Global Times.

And, overseas production capacity of coronaviru­s vaccines has now reached a bottleneck, while China’s production capacity continues to rise, which signals that many markets may have to rely on home- made doses in the future.

“The majority of Chinese people are already vaccinated… This means that China will be able to allocate more capacities to aid other countries,” Feng said. Last year, China exported about 40 percent of its vaccine doses abroad.

Feng noted that many Chinese vaccine companies have obtained certificat­ion from the WHO, and the categories of vaccines applying for WHO certificat­ion are growing.

Recently, the first dose of COVID- 19 inactivate­d vaccine specifical­ly against the Omicron variant was administer­ed during a clinical trial in Hangzhou, East China’s Zhejiang Province.

Apart from external demand fluctuatio­n, China is making adjustment­s to the pattern it exported vaccines. China shipped a set of production equipment of a factory for vaccine production to Morocco. The factory, once constructe­d, is expected to produce more than 20 kinds of vaccines for Africa.

“China’s policy of filling immunizati­on gap is moving with the times, as the country started to export vaccine production equipment and supply chains to other countries, especially those along the Belt and Road route,” Chen said.

Deng Zhidong, general manager of Hainan Boao Medical Technology Co, told the Global Times that considerin­g the level of automation across China’s vaccine production, the mass production ability and lower production costs, the competitiv­e edge of domestic vaccines is evident.

Most experts pointed out that less developed regions would be China’s major incrementa­l market for COVID vaccine exports, including Africa, Latin America and South Asia.

China vowed earlier this year during the Boao Forum to export another 600 million doses of vaccines to Africa and 150 million doses to ASEAN countries, in a bid to fill immunizati­on gap.

 ?? Photo: cnsphoto ?? The first shipment of 1.5 million doses of Sinovac COVID- 19 vaccine purchased by Cambodia from China arrives in Phnom Penh on March 26, 2021.
Photo: cnsphoto The first shipment of 1.5 million doses of Sinovac COVID- 19 vaccine purchased by Cambodia from China arrives in Phnom Penh on March 26, 2021.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China