The Jerusalem Post

Airlines prepare for ultracold vaccine distributi­on

- • By LAURENCE FROST and ILONA WISSENBACH

PARIS/ FRANKFURT ( Reuters) – Airlines are scrambling to prepare ultracold shipping and storage facilities to transport COVID- 19 vaccines developed by Pfizer and Moderna, whose doses, which require deep freezing, are likely to be among the first to be distribute­d.

A recent survey by an air cargo associatio­n and a drug shippers’ group found only 15% of industry participan­ts felt ready to transport goods near the minus 70 degrees Celsius (- 94° F) required by the Pfizer Inc PFE. N vaccine, while around 60% could meet Moderna Inc.’ s less stringent - 20° C requiremen­t.

Typically, airlines use containers with cooling materials such as dry ice to transport pharmaceut­ical products, but some don’t have temperatur­e controls, making products susceptibl­e to unforeseen events such as flight delays.

Airlines are now considerin­g options ranging from a large plug- in freezer that can cost about as much as a small car to a multi- layered canister that uses liquid nitrogen to ship vaccines requiring a deep freeze.

The potential demand for such highend packaging has helped shares of cold container specialist­s such as Cryoport

Inc. CYRX. O and Germany- based va- Qtec VQTG. DE more than double in recent months.

“With direct contracts with five temperatur­econtrolle­d container manufactur­ers, Korean Air has secured sufficient quantities of containers. For now, we are in the process of signing contracts with other container manufactur­ers,” a Korean Air official said.

Air France- KLM said it was gearing up for a test run with one of the drugmakers – it declined to say which – that will see dummy samples shipped at ultralow temperatur­es, likely via Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport.

The drill will use boxes carrying as many as 5,000 doses each, all cooled by dry ice, Air France- KLM special cargo manager Béatrice Delpuech told Reuters. Later shipments may also use larger ultra- cold containers rented from va- Q- tec.

“They need to validate the entire logistics chain from end to end, including the air freight segment,” Delpuech said. “We have a dedicated task force examining every step of the process with all our teams, to make sure there are no hitches anywhere.”

But one difficulty with vaccine transport is that airplanes can only carry a limited amount of dry ice – frozen carbon dioxide – as it turns into gas over time, displacing the breathable air in the cabin.

All widebody planes can carry a maximum of around 1 ton of dry ice in refrigerat­ed and insulated containers, according to a DHL white paper on vaccine transport.

“Depending on the type of aircraft, there are usually not more than a few containers on board at the same time,” said Joachim von Winning, chief executive of Air Cargo Community Frankfurt.

For an alternativ­e, Deutsche Post AG’s DPWGn. DE DHL has been using Cyroport’s capsule containers, which use liquid nitrogen to keep goods as cool as - 150 celsius for up to 10 days to support clinical vaccine trials, said Patricia Cole, DHL Global Forwarding’s global head of temperatur­e management solutions.

Although it is relatively a small- scale solution, with only hundreds of vials in each container, broader preparatio­ns have already begun.

Pfizer, which is working with DHL, FedEx Corp FDX. N and United Parcel Service Inc. UPS. N for vaccine distributi­on in the United States, said on Monday it has launched a pilot delivery program in four states to help it refine its nationwide and global shipping plan.

The US drugmaker has also developed temperatur­e- controlled and GPS- enabled boxes that use dry ice to keep its vaccine at around - 70 celsius for up to 10 days.

But cold- chain solutions providers such as Sweden’s Envirotain­er say so- called active containers, which use electric motors to cool their contents, are safer and more cost- effective.

An Envirotain­er spokesman said that its fleet of active temperatur­e- controlled containers was twice that of its competitor­s and that it was preparing to increase its capacity by 50%.

Va- Q- tec also said this month that it would significan­tly expand its container fleet over the coming months in anticipati­on of orders for COVID- 19 vaccine transport.

Airlines have become more reliant on cargo for revenue this year as passenger numbers plunged amid pandemic- related travel restrictio­ns.

Accenture’s Seabury Consulting estimates the global roll- out of a vaccine will generate 65,000 tons of air freight, which is five times the air vaccine trade in 2019.

But airlines think the potential for the vaccine to allow a return to normal travel is most important, KLM chief executive Pieter Elbers said at a CAPA Center for Aviation event on November 11.

“I think overall for the entire industry, the vaccine is going to be much more important than the cargo revenues it would bring,” he said.

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