India raises Covid vaccine production amid sharp dip in cases
Serum Institute, which manufactures AstraZeneca's vaccine, known in India as Covishield, has significantly augmented its production capacity in the past few months. In January, it was at 50 million doses a month, reaching 70 million in March
India is focusing on stepping up its vaccine production even as a deadly second wave of Covid-19 has abated in recent weeks. The country hopes to inoculate its entire adult population of more than 940 million by the end of the year.
Two of India's domestic vaccine manufacturers - the Pune-based Serum Institute of India, the world's largest producer, and Hyderabad-based Bharat Biotech - have been the main providers of doses for the country's inoculation drive, which began on 16 January, reports the Nikkei.
The Indian government granted emergency-use approval for Russia's Sputnik V vaccine in April, while US-based Moderna's Covid-19 jab was approved in June. It is in talks with Pfizer to do the same.
"Vaccination is the best hope for humanity to emerge successfully from the pandemic," Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said Monday, offering India's CoWIN digital vaccination platform to the world.
CoWIN, or the Covid Vaccine Intelligence Network, is the technological backbone driving vaccination in India, a country of more than 1.3 billion people. It helps in planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of the inoculation program.
"This is the platform through which India has administered 350 million doses of Covid vaccines," Modi said, addressing the CoWIN Global Conclave, adding that the software can be customised for any country according to local requirements.
Serum Institute, which manufactures AstraZeneca's vaccine, known in India as Covishield, has significantly augmented its production capacity in the past few months. In January, it was at 50 million doses a month, reaching 70 million in March.
By June, the figure stood at 90 million doses a month. Its chief executive, Adar Poonawalla, told the India Global Forum on 30 June: "We will probably add another 10% to that output in August. This has happened at world-record speed, not just at Serum Institute but even at other manufacturers."
In the case of Bharat Biotech, which developed India's first indigenous vaccine, called Covaxin, in collaboration with state-run Indian Council of Medical Research, capacity is targeted to reach 60 million to 70 million doses a month in July-August, and nearly 100 million doses by September, up from 10 million in April.
"Vaccination being the only tool to mitigate this deadly pandemic, ramping up of Covid vaccine production is being taken up by the government of India on a war footing," an official statement said on 27 June.
On 21 June, the day the Modi government began offering free vaccination for all adults, the country administered a record 9 million doses in a day. The number has since averaged 4 million to 5 million doses per day, about half the number of jabs needed to meet the goal of inoculating the entire population over the age of 18 by December.
The Indian government said on 8 June that it had placed orders for 250 million Covishield doses and 190 million Covaxin doses. The announcement came days after it reserved 300 million doses of a vaccine being developed by Biological-E, another domestic manufacturer. The Biological E vaccine, which is in Phase 3 clinical trials, is likely to be available in September.
In an affidavit submitted to the Supreme Court on June 26, the Indian government said it expected to procure 1.35 billion vaccine doses from August to December, down significantly its May forecast for 2.16 billion doses during the five-month period.