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COVID-19 exposes India’s dependence on China for active pharma ingredients

Wa.

Lumping India's impotency with china.

Impotency.
Perhaps you should know that you are talking to a subject matter expert. India is doing way good in generics. has it been the case, world will surely face scarcity of generic medicine for sure..
 
indians give fda inspector delhi belly to make him go home

play dirty trick like burning trees
I have faced USFDA auditor. They are one of the most stringent guyz or gals of the world.
Except food during audit, they don't accept even a smallest of the things. In my career of more than 10 years, I have seen these guyz in 7 different locations and 3 different companies. Only one case of accepting a book written by some renowned Indian author, that's it. It does not matter where their origin is from, India or any other nation. They work very professionally.
Last year we faced an audit and leader of the team was a Pakistani born auditor. She was equally professional as like any of her teammates who were US born.
 
are you talking about financial auditors like CPA u.s
I have faced USFDA auditor. They are one of the most stringent guyz or gals of the world.
Except food during audit, they don't accept even a smallest of the things. In my career of more than 10 years, I have seen these guyz in 7 different locations and 3 different companies. Only one case of accepting a book written by some renowned Indian author, that's it. It does not matter where their origin is from, India or any other nation. They work very professionally.
Last year we faced an audit and leader of the team was a Pakistani born auditor. She was equally professional as like any of her teammates who were US born.
 
Don't worry, US depends on China for its drugs more, the whole world depends on China for this.
Even Chinese do not trust medicine or milk that is made in China (based on my first hand experience).
They are desperate to import/smuggle life-saving medicine from India which are much lower cost and more reliable.

So you AGREE China with HIGHER LABOR COST can produce cheaper.
INDIANS MUST BE DUMB, so IQ82 is proven.

India’s manufacturing labor is more competitive when compared to China.
In 2014, the average cost of manufacturing labor per hour was $.92 in India and $3.52 in China.
.
What can Pakistan produce with its even lower labor cost?
 
Even Chinese do not trust medicine or milk that is made in China (based on my first hand experience).
They are desperate to import/smuggle life-saving medicine from India which are much lower cost and more reliable.

What can Pakistan produce with its even lower labor cost?
And you think Chinese trust medicine or milk that is made in India?
Why no Chinese think Cow Cola or Cow Dung is great?

How many Indians die drinking their high quality Indian liquor?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...ccb1ec-2d35-11e9-ac6c-14eea99d5e24_story.html
According to the latest figures from India’s National Crime Records Bureau, 1,522 people died of drinking spurious liquor in 2015.

Each country must find their own way.
India decided on the service route, mainly offshoring and IT.
I think it is successful, even though some may criticized that decision.
That low cost industries are leaving China for South East Asia BUT NOT India makes me feel that was a good decision.
In Singapore, Indians and Chinese cooperate and tend to occupy work that are to their strengths instead of competing directly.

The direction that India and China took is actually ripe for cooperation rather than competition.
Unfortunately the US is very successful to sell China Hate to the Indians
1 UNDIES MASK for you.
.
 
are you talking about financial auditors like CPA u.s
USFDA auditors are basically sort of scientist. They do have lot of scientific knowledge and also understanding of good manufacturing process and good lab process. They are excellent in reviewing the documents. To be honest, they are damn good and ruthless..
 
My research has found that in order for India to produce Hydroxychloroquine API it must import some key raw materials and intermediates from China, or South Korea, or Italy or Finland. It can not manufacture on its own.

Hydroxychloroquine maker faces ingredient crunch
Drug maker Amneal says firm is running low on materials for anti-malarial drug seen as possible coroanvirus treatment.

an hour ago
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Amneal has committed to producing about 20 million hydroxychloroquine tablets by mid-April, but will face challenges making any more after that because of difficulties acquiring active pharmaceutical ingredients from its supplier in Finland, coCEOs Chirag and Chintu Patel said in an interview with Reuters News Agency [File: Craig Lassig/Reuters]

Amneal Pharmaceuticals could soon run out of the raw ingredients to make more of the antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine that has been touted as a potential treatment for COVID-19 because Finland is keeping the drug for domestic use, according to the generic drugmaker's chief executives.

Amneal has committed to producing about 20 million hydroxychloroquine tablets by mid-April, but will face challenges making any more after that because of difficulties acquiring active pharmaceutical ingredients from its supplier in Finland, coCEOs Chirag and Chintu Patel said in an interview.

"As the demand has increased all across the globe ... the Finnish government has put out an emergency order to prioritize their domestic use for local needs," coCEO Chintu Patel said in the interview on Tuesday.

Hydroxychloroquine is a decades-old drug promoted by many, including United States President Donald Trump, as a potential weapon against COVID-19. It has become a standard of care in areas of the US hit hard by the pandemic, even though doctors prescribing it have no idea whether it works.

Demand for the drug has soared worldwide and some countries, like India, have placed restrictions on its export. Amneal currently manufactures hydroxychloroquine in India and the brothers said the company was working with India to provide an exception to ship its finished product to the US.

Finland has not yet issued any bans or restrictions on drug exports, according to the Finnish medicines agency Fimea.

But even under normal circumstances, Finnish law requires pharmaceutical companies to commit themselves to fulfil national needs first. Because the demand for hydroxychloroquine and its active agents has surged in Finland, Finnish makers have less to export, Fimea said.

"The increased national need may impact the schedules of export deliveries, even if no export restrictions have been issued by the government," Fimea Director Johanna Nystedt said in an email. "Surely every country hopes to obtain more hydroxychloroquine at the moment and therefore its makers' order books are certainly full."

The Finnish government, on the basis of the state of emergency it has issued, is preparing an amendment which if adopted would allow restricting exports of certain medicines.

Orion Corp and its subsidiary Fermion are the two Finnish companies that make hydroxychloroquine and its raw materials. Fermion is Amneal's supplier, according to a source familiar with the matter.

Orion said in a statement that securing its own raw materials from abroad is challenging and it would be pleased if it could deliver more.

"Finnish authorities have far-reaching rights to intervene in the operations of the actors in our field of business. In the exceptional situation Finland's needs have priority," Orion said. "Demand for the agent in question (API) is heavy around the world at the moment but unfortunately we cannot respond to the demand commensurately."

Amneal said it is working to source the raw materials elsewhere and is trying to get its Brookhaven, NY, manufacturing site FDA-approved to make more products, including hydroxychloroquine. Amneal has said it is donating more than 6.5 million of the tablets to New York, Texas, Louisiana and hospitals across the country.

Chintu Patel said he believes the supply issues will ease up in two or three months.

"There are multiple suppliers, but worldwide demand, so people are allocating their inventory and we are in the process of qualifying more than one supplier so we can do what we can to help in this crisis situation," he said.

https://www.aljazeera.com/ajimpact/...-faces-ingredient-crunch-200410154137849.html
 
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COVID-19 exposes India’s dependence on China for active pharma ingredients
India imports around 90 per cent of APIs used to make antibiotics, says an expert
By Kundan Pandey
Last Updated: Tuesday 07 April 2020
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The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has revealed India’s overdependence on China for active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) — also known as bulk drugs — defined by the World Health Organization as any substances used in finished pharmaceutical products.

India’s pharmaceutical industry is the third-largest in the world in terms of volume.

Two-thirds of the total imports of bulk drugs or drug intermediaries, however, come from China, DV Sadananda Gowda, the Union minister for Chemicals and Fertilizers, told the Lok Sabha on February 2020.

India imports around 90 per cent of APIs used to make antibiotics, according to Ashok Madan, the executive director of the Indian Drug Manufacturer Association.

The fear of not receiving the required number of APIs from China was so high that policy makers scrambled to order several measures just before the 21-day nationwide lockdown was announced.

The Union government announced the constitution of a committee under the chairmanship of Eshwara Reddy, Joint Drugs Controller, Central Drugs Standard Control Organization (CDSCO) in March to address the issue of drug security in the country.

It also announced a package to revive the API industry in the country.

The irony in these measures emerged from the fact that the government understood the importance of reviving the industry years ago. National Security Advisor Ajit Doval had warned in 2014 that Chinese dependence of APIs could be a national security threat.

The UPA government had constituted a committee under VM Katoch in 2013 on this issue. The report, submitted in 2015, suggested several measures including the establishment of exclusive parks.

A draft policy had also emerged in 2017 over this. No progress was, however, made on this draft, with nothing changing on ground.

Indian manufacturers had to control pollution and be economically competitive at the same time, according to Reji K Joseph, an associate professor at the Institute for Studies in Industrial Development in New Delhi.

This was why the Indian industry lagged behind China, according to him.

India had exported APIs during the 1990s and was far ahead than China, according to Madan.

China strategically supported its core industry at a time when India had opened up its economy, with private players getting the freedom to either import or locally procure APIs based on economic viability.

The Chinese industry received huge state support, by getting almost no land cost, negligible financial cost, cheap electricity, water and labour and began to dump Penicillin G in India.

Chinese firms outperformed Indian manufacturers like Hindustan Antibiotic in the public sector and private sector enterprises like Torrent Pharmaceuticals Ltd, Alembic Pharma, Southern Petrochemical Industries Corporation Ltd and JK Pharmachem, that were engages in manufacturing Penicillin G.

Manufacturing units in the country still have an edge despite an increase in labour costs because of several reasons, including 10-12 per cent of subsidies in export given by the government that are untraceable, said Madan.

China allowed a relaxation in environmental norms till 2015, when the Beijing Olympics were organized, according to experts.

The first environmental facility inspection in China was conducted in 2015 in Hebei, China’s most-polluted province.

Approximately 150 API manufacturers in China shut their facilities in 2016-18, as a result, according to a white paper published by consultancy firm Beroe in July 2019.

Indian API firms have been under strict scrutiny for pollution, all this while.

The central pollution control board identified the API sector as one among 18 highly-polluting industries in the country.

The Indian industry was forced to follow stringent environmental regulation and fight red tape, according to Madan. The API sector was kept in the same grouping as other chemical industries, according to him.

This crisis led to a slowdown of the industry that found it easier to purchase APIs from China rather than investing in local industry.

Technology and scale needed

India needs technology that ensures less pollution and cheap raw materials to compete with Chinese companies, according to Joseph.

Chinese firms use cheaper raw materials like cauliflower for fermentation, while Indian companies use glucose and lactose as raw materials and use submerged fermentation technology that requires costlier bio-reactors, said Joseph.

Private players did not show interest in research and development because of an uncertain future, he added.

Scale was also something that India lagged in, compared to China. India also had fermenters with lesser capacities, compared to China, said Madan.

Penicillin G, azythromycin, several antibiotics, statins and many others are made through fermentation.

The conductors where maize, corn or other raw materials are added, vary in size from 200-20,000 litres.

This needs an investment of Rs 300-500 crore and three to four years of time.

The government is very keen that industry should set up and enter the fermentation business. The industry, however, also needs policy guarantees.

A long term strategy and a clear-cut policy for all possible situations will need to be chalked out.

The government should also push public sector institutions to invest in technology, said Joseph.

https://www.downtoearth.org.in/news...-on-china-for-active-pharma-ingredients-70272
Exposes is a redundant term for something which everyone already knew. The crisis is only going to make India more self reliant on indigenous API manufacturing. Such articles should keep coming in. A required nudge in the right direction for us. Sad for China.

your pharma runs on the affordability factor.. otherwise bigshots dont really enjoy visiting Hyderabad for sightseeing industrial waste heaps with kids and cows bathing around around the production areas.
Indian generic medicines are cheaper normally by factor or 10s and 100s. Changeing of API source is not going to make it unaffordable. Just reduced margin of profits in the short term.
 

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