As the world’s largest Covid-19 vaccination programme gathers pace, demand for syringes is in danger of overshooting supply. Anticipating a demand-supply mismatch, the Directorate General of Foreign Trade put curbs on the export of syringes and needles this Monday.
India needs around 300 million syringes to inoculate its children annually. But it needs close to that number every month for the Covid-19 vaccination drive.
Syringe producers, therefore, need to inject some pace to keep up with this demand. Vaccine availability in India surpasses the production rate of auto-disable (AD) syringes, and buffer stocks were inadequately created, Rajiv Nath, chairman and managing director of Hindustan Syringes and Medical Devices (HMD), one of India’s largest syringe manufacturers, said.
Yet, the ramp-up of the Covid-19 vaccination programme was planned well in advance, and domestic syringe makers also expanded capacities over the last one year.
HMD, which makes the Dispovan brand, has already doubled its AD syringe capacity from 500 million a year to a billion syringes now. Its overall capacity has increased from 2.4 billion syringes a year (including disposable ones) to 3 billion now. In June 2020 the capacity was 500 million units of 0.5 ml AD syringes. By March 2022, HMD aims to ramp up AD syringe capacity to 1.25 billion, and disposable syringe capacity to 2 billion annually, taking its total syringe capacity to 3.5 billion a year.
HMD, which has its plant in Faridabad, Haryana, is also adding a new plant to make steel tubings and canulae, components for making needles. The firm has invested Rs 100 crore in the last one year for this, and plans to put in another Rs 50 crore.
But these expansions are clearly not enough to meet immediate needs. Industry sources claim that the Centre is looking to procure around 1 billion syringes between September and December to support the vaccination drive. Anticipating that the supply of AD syringes could be tight, the government has floated tenders to procure even disposable syringes.
Narendra Jain, president and CEO of Iscon Surgicals, another major syringes maker, explained: “The government is now open to procuring even 1 cc AD syringes apart from the 0.5 ml syringes. Some six or seven players who have a 1 cc product could, thus, participate in tenders. Moreover, low-dead space syringes (which ensure little or no wastage of the dose) are now also being procured by the Centre.”
The problem is exacerbated by the fact that the demand for syringes for purposes other than Covid-19 vaccinations has also picked up. Nath said that last year, of the 1.9 billion disposable syringe capacity they had, the utilisation was around 50-60 per cent. Now this has gone up to 100 per cent.
As of now, the bulk of the production of key companies is consumed by the domestic market. Almost 80 per cent of HMD’s production is consumed in India, and the proportion is more or less similar for Iscon.
But the problem of aligning supply with specific demand remains. The industry body of syringe makers — the All India Syringe & Needle Manufacturers Association — has urged the government to lift the restriction on non-Covid-19 sizes of syringes such as those for administering insulin, 5 ml and larger sizes as also the 0.3 ml AD syringes being developed for Pfizer. It further said that at least 50 per cent of the quantity shipped to the country last year during the October-to-January period should be permitted for export.