Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Centre’s vaccine complex in TN seeks bids for production

- Divya Chandrabab­u letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE PLANT, WHEN OPERATIONA­L, WOULD HAVE CAPACITY TO PRODUCE ONE BILLION VACCINES ANNUALLY, AN OFFICIAL SAID

CHENNAI: The central government-owned integrated vaccine complex HLL Biotech Ltd at Chengalpat­tu, 63km from Chennai, could start producing Covid vaccines in the next six months provided it gets all clearances, a senior company official, who did not wish to be named, said on Friday.

The company has started the process to invite tenders for the purpose, he said. Work on the complex started in March 2012 under the UPA-2 government with a capital investment of ₹594 crore. “It’s been wrongly projected that the facility has been lying idle for nine years,” the official said, adding that constructi­on started only in late 2013 and the ground work was completed in 2018.

“It could have been completed by 2019 but it has been delayed due to cost escalation. We are in the final stages of completion after which the facility has to go through a WHO GMP (good manufactur­ing practices) check before it can start manufactur­ing. We will be ready to start manufactur­ing vaccines in six months in a phased manner,” he said.

The plant, when fully operationa­l, would have capacity to produce one billion vaccines annually, he added.

HLL floated an expression of interest in January and was in talks with major and mid-level players, which included pharma companies and biotech groups looking to make an entry into the vaccine market. A tender was floated at the end of March and bids can be submitted till May 31.

However, lawyers and political parties said that floating a tender has been used as an excuse and blamed the Union ministry of health and family welfare for the delay.

“During a national emergency, where is the question of floating a tender?” said senior advocate and DMK MP, P Wilson. “There are state and central government guidelines (Central Vigilance Commission for Centre and TN Transparen­cy Tender Act 1998) where you can go for a single tender or single source procuremen­t in case of an emergency.”

The MP is also appearing in a Madras high court suo moto case regarding Covid-19 preparedne­ss being heard by a division bench comprised of chief justice Sanjib

Bannerjee and Senthilkum­ar Ramamoorth­y.

“The Additional Solicitor General (ASG R Sankaranar­ayanan) representi­ng the Centre informed the court on May 10 that the last two times tenders were called, no one had come forward with a bid and that these centres lack the technical know-how to manufactur­e the two vaccines,” said Wilson. “Since this is a national emergency, you can’t keep on waiting. There is a provision under section 92 of the Patent Act, 1970 which permits the central government to compulsori­ly license a drug so they don’t need to wait for a player to have a patent right to manufactur­e the drugs or a vaccine.”

On Friday, he wrote to Union health minister Harsh Vardhan to take steps to utilise three vaccine manufactur­ing centres in Tamil Nadu – King’s Institute at Chennai, Pasteur Institute at Conoor and the Chengalpat­tu facility – for manufactur­ing Covid vaccines. One of his suggestion­s is that Serum Institute of India and Bharat Biotech be permitted to manufactur­e Covishield and Covaxin vaccines in these centres.

The Viduthalai Chiruthaig­al Katchi’s (VCK) Villupuram MP D Ravikumar has also written to the Union health minister, saying Bharat Biotech should share its Covaxin technology with Tamil Nadu so that Covid vaccines can be manufactur­ed as these facilities.

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