City
Epaper

Rs 150 per dose is not sustainable in long run: Bharat Biotech on Centre's Covaxin price

By ANI | Updated: June 15, 2021 15:20 IST

Indigenous COVID-19 vaccine maker Bharat Biotech on Tuesday said the supply price of Covaxin to the Government of India at Rs 150 per dose is a non-competitive price and not sustainable in the long run, hence a higher price in private markets is required to offset part of the costs.

Open in App

Indigenous COVID-19 vaccine maker Bharat Biotech on Tuesday said the supply price of Covaxin to the Government of India at Rs 150 per dose is a non-competitive price and not sustainable in the long run, hence a higher price in private markets is required to offset part of the costs.

"The supply price of Covaxin to the government of India at Rs 150 per dose, is a non-competitive price and clearly not sustainable in the long run. Hence a higher price in private markets is required to offset part of the costs," Bharat Biotech said in a statement.

The company said, as directed by the Government of India, less than 10 per cent of the total production of Covaxin to date has been supplied to private hospitals, while most of the remaining quantity was supplied to state and central government.

"As directed by the Government of India, less than 10 per cent of our total production of Covaxin to date has been supplied to private hospitals, while most of the remaining quantity was supplied to state and central governments. In such a scenario the weighted average price of covaxin for all supplies realized by Bharat Biotech is less than Rs 250 per dose. Going forward, ~75 per cent of the capacity will be supplied to state and central governments with only 25 per cent going to private hospitals," the statement read.

The company clarifies that the procurement of vaccines by private hospitals is optional and not mandatory, albeit it gives a choice to citizens who are willing to pay for better convenience.

"Unlike most medicines and therapeutics, vaccines are provided free of cost by the Government of India to all eligible Indian citizens. Thus, the procurement of vaccines by private hospitals is optional and not mandatory, albeit it gives a choice to citizens who are willing to pay for better convenience. In our view, the question of product pricing is only of extraneous interest to all concerned, especially when the same vaccine is made available free of cost," it said.

Hyderabad-based vaccine manufacturer also added that it is pertinent to mention the urgent need to set up a significant number of manufacturing facilities and to divert existing ones for Covaxin, which has resulted in reduced production of other vaccines at our facilities, leading to a loss in revenues.

"Product development activities towards the development of vaccines against newer variants are also underway at our facilities," the statement revealed.

Bharat Biotech mentioned that it should be allowed to maintain a differential pricing strategy for governments and private hospitals.

"It should be noted that companies such as Bharat Biotech, which are innovators with specialized expertise in product development, and large scale manufacturing, should be allowed to maintain a differential pricing strategy for governments and private hospitals," said the company statement.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Bharat Biotech InternationalGovernment Of IndiaBharat biotech limitedBharat biotech international ltdBharat biotech company
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiCambodia Cyber Slavery Racket Busted: 520 Indians Rescued From Illegal Scam Centres in Joint MEA–MHA Operation

NationalIndiaSkills Competition 2025: Registrations Open for Nation’s Biggest Skill Talent Hunt; Deadline September 30

MumbaiMumbai: Man Arrested for Posing as IAS Officer, Staying at Customs Guest House with Fake ID

NationalNew Aadhaar App Integrates UPI-Like ID Verification: 6 More Smart Features You Should Know

NationalIndian Constitution Unveiled in Maithili and Sanskrit; 22-Language Translation to Complete by March 2025

National Realted Stories

NationalRBI’s rate pause balances inflation control, growth support: Analysts

NationalRestraint, dialogue takes precedence over confrontation: Kashmir Mirwaiz on US-Iran ceasefire

National"What did 39-day war achieve for the US...?": Omar Abdullah on US-Iran ceasefire

NationalCM Patel meets Commonwealth Sport delegation during first Gujarat visit for 2030 Games

NationalCrypto-hawala surge raises red flag for security agencies