The Edge Singapore

Robust supply networks offer a shot in the arm for vaccine roll-out hopes

- BY ANTHONY OUNDJIAN Anthony Oundjian is managing director and senior partner at Boston Consulting Group.

It has been a long year for businesses and communitie­s across Southeast Asia. But after 12 months of pandemic-related challenges, vaccines now offer a welcome ray of hope on the horizon. With the remarkable efforts of the scientific community to develop not one, but multiple viable vaccines against Covid-19, efforts now turn to the essential supply chain infrastruc­ture that is fundamenta­l to a successful vaccine roll-out.

Vaccinatio­n supply chains are by their nature a complex beast. They require complicate­d but seamless interconne­ctivity between manufactur­ing, logistics and health infrastruc­ture.

This complexity gives rise to many challenges, stirring fears that the next great global hurdle in overcoming the pandemic is not science, but supply chain logistics. Surmountin­g these obstacles is crucial to ensure that businesses and communitie­s can once again resume operations.

In order to understand this global challenge, Boston Consulting Group (BCG) partnered with leading logistics company Kuehne+Nagel to analyse the robustness of global vaccine supply chains.

Our findings reveal a reassuring look at the infrastruc­ture for distributi­ng Covid-19 vaccines around the world.

Complex logistics for complex solutions

Supply chain considerat­ions invariably differ across Southeast Asia. Vaccine roll-out in a compact nation like Singapore will be self-evidently different than distributi­on across a dispersed population over the thousands of islands of Indonesia or the Philippine­s.

Due to its supply chain infrastruc­ture and compact nature, Singapore is better placed to deploy vaccines compared to its regional peers. The country plans to establish around 40 vaccinatio­n centres and 10 mobile teams dedicated to Covid-19 vaccine distributi­on by the end of April, leveraging the 20-strong polyclinic network and selected GP practices.

Given its hub status, Singapore is also looking at the possibilit­y of being a regional distributo­r — and playing a role in filling vials and packaging the vaccine for final distributi­on.

There are now a dozen vaccines approved for use in various countries, each with their own recommenda­tions for supply chain and distributi­on. These varied supply chain conditions, compounded by considerat­ions around the differing efficacy of each vaccine, will add to complexity for decision-makers in planning and managing a vaccine roll-out.

Manufactur­ing represents the first hurdle. Engaging the manufactur­ing capacity to inoculate the global adult population is no small task. There are now tens of billions of doses promised for delivery in 2021, thanks to an unpreceden­ted scientific effort.

There have already been early challenges, with fraught discussion­s between the European Union and supplier Pfizer over delayed supplies, and diplomatic challenges around the allocation of AstraZenec­a production between the UK and the EU when 1Q output appeared below projection­s.

With locally-backed vaccine candidate from Arcturus Therapeuti­cs yet to go through phase three trials, Singapore is reliant on imports of vaccine doses from abroad. The country is exposed to external hurdles around manufactur­ing failures and potential “nationalis­t” approaches in producing countries that prioritise local availabili­ty. The timely availabili­ty of vaccines may well represent the most notable challenge for Singapore’s current vaccine programme.

Cold chain requiremen­ts also present a hurdle for some vaccines. The Pfizer vaccine, one of the world’s first approved vaccines, has ultra-cold shipping temperatur­e requiremen­ts of –80°C while the vaccine from Moderna requires –20°C. These will require advanced cold storage infrastruc­ture that could be beyond some less developed areas.

While BCG’s study reveals the welcome availabili­ty of necessary resources such as dry ice to meet the cold chain requiremen­ts, aligning with storage capabiliti­es at a community hospital in a rural part of Southeast Asia seems unlikely. Vaccine choices in such cases will need to align the ease of supply and storage with the level of local health infrastruc­ture.

Vaccines with complex supply needs may still play a part in Southeast Asia’s strategy, particular­ly in more advanced urban centres such as Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok, and other cities. Singapore has been quick to approve the use of Pfizer-BioNtech and Moderna vaccines for example, as ultra-cold chain is not a limiting factor in nationwide vaccinatio­n.

Global transport and logistics providers like Kuehne+Nagel are already working on regional hub strategies with strategic distributi­on hubs which offer appropriat­e storage for a range of vaccines.

Bridging storage and distributi­on gap

Having tackled the challenges of manufactur­ing and storage, Southeast Asian nations will need to address the varied challenges of transport, distributi­on, and cost.

Different countries and regions will adopt different models of distributi­on. There is no one-size-fits-all approach, and vaccinatin­g rural areas of Laos will require a markedly different strategy to over-65s in Kuala Lumpur.

Many variations of the distributi­on model are viable. Some might adopt a hub-and-spoke model, with central stocking at a carefully controlled warehouse used to distribute supply on demand. Point-to-point delivery, with cooling infrastruc­ture in place at vaccinatio­n centres but no intermedia­te storage, could provide a solution in some communitie­s.

A comprehens­ive state-run programme like the UK or Israeli vaccine roll-out offers a third option, leveraging national coordinati­on efforts and establishe­d agencies to drive distributi­on.

BCG analysis of global supply chains reveals that while planning may be challengin­g, such distributi­on is well within the bounds of freight capacity. Vaccine shipments would represent less than 1% of global air freight capacity.

Delivery costs will also be an important considerat­ion, particular­ly in nations of Southeast Asia where price sensitivit­y remains a challenge for health systems. The global not-for-profit Covid-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) facility may play some role in mitigating costs to less affluent nations such as Laos and Cambodia.

Those nations not participat­ing in this scheme should be reassured that distributi­on costs will be a relatively small part of overall vaccinatio­n costs. BCG estimates that distributi­on costs run to just US$0.07 ($0.094) per dose, dependent on air freight costs and last-mile delivery. A worldwide pandemic costing the global economy billions of dollars a day puts such costs in perspectiv­e.

Perhaps the most pressing concern in many Southeast Asian countries will be the final considerat­ion around the point of delivery. Israel — a world leader with over 90% of the adult population vaccinated — benefits from modern, centralise­d healthcare recordkeep­ing and concentrat­ed population density with easy community access to vaccinatio­n hubs. That is a world away from the challenges of vaccinatin­g the 17,000 inhabitant­s of the Philippine­s’ remote Batanes islands.

Compoundin­g this challenge is the need for vaccinator­s on the ground to understand the varied storage and administra­tion requiremen­ts of different vaccines. Private healthcare providers will have to work closely with staterun national health infrastruc­ture to overcome these challenges in partnershi­p.

This is particular­ly important given the dual-dose nature of many existing vaccines, and the need to record and track not just who, but when a dose was delivered to align with national guidelines on dosing regimens.

An effective vaccinatio­n roll-out undoubtedl­y comes with challenges. But BCG’s study shows those logistical hurdles are far from insurmount­able. Businesses and society should look to a future of greater freedom with hope, with both the logistics and expertise in place to ensure a successful roll-out.

While the final form of that roll-out might vary by location, the opportunit­y is clear to provide a shot in the arm for the regional economic and social restart in 2021 and beyond. E

 ?? KUEHNE+NAGEL ?? Vaccinatio­n supply chains require complicate­d but seamless interconne­ctivity between manufactur­ing, logistics and health infrastruc­ture
KUEHNE+NAGEL Vaccinatio­n supply chains require complicate­d but seamless interconne­ctivity between manufactur­ing, logistics and health infrastruc­ture
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