Business Standard

PLI could bring in ~50K cr into pharma sector

- SOHINI DAS

Major pharma players have warmed up to the bulk drug production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme. According to industry insiders, once the second tranche of the scheme covering formulatio­ns comes online, it may trigger investment­s worth ~50,000 crore.

There are two PLI schemes for the pharma sector — one for bulk drugs, and another covering formulatio­ns, biologics, complex generics, etc.

According to the people, 86 companies have applied to start production of bulk drugs listed under the PLI scheme so far, said sources. “About 86 proposals have gone to the department of pharmaceut­icals for 215 molecules in total,” said an industry source.

Lupin, Cipla, and Dr Reddy’s Laboratori­es (DRL) are have shown interest in participat­ing already.

Some drug majors are looking for opportunit­ies in the second version of the PLI scheme, which is about to come. Lupin, for example, has already applied under the bulk drug API scheme, and is looking to participat­e in the second round as well.

Nilesh Gupta, managing director of Lupin, said: “The existing PLI scheme and the second version of the PLI scheme are powerful. We are looking at opportunit­ies in the second round. We are looking at some of the products that fits in with our business and our overall plans. We have put in applicatio­ns in the first PLI scheme too, but we can participat­e more meaningful­ly in the second round.”

Cipla has also indicated that it will be interested in participat­ing in the second phase of the PLI scheme.

Last year, the government had announced a ~6,940-crore PLI scheme to boost local manufactur­ing of bulk drugs (raw materials to make medicines), as India imports almost 70 per cent of its requiremen­t of bulk drugs.

Then, in November, the Cabinet approved of a ~15,000-crore scheme for pharma products. The incentive will be 5-10 per cent of the production value, sources said. It could also be linked to production volume.

The idea is twopronged — to reduce import of highvalue products like patented drugs, cell-based or gene therapy products, etc, and to boost local manufactur­ing to a scale that India becomes a net exporter of these products.

“A lot of patented products now get made in countries like Ireland. Our aim is to encourage production in India through incentive schemes to attract multinatio­nal corporatio­ns to make these drugs here and use India as the manufactur­ing base for exporting,” said a senior government official directly involved in the drafting of the scheme.

The fine print of this second scheme is expected in February. A new committee has been formed by the department of pharma that is working out the modalities.

A source said manufactur­ers would be categorise­d according to turnovers, and incentives would be different for different categories.

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