China to back global virus fight with production boost
By Global
Times staff reporters
Global
coronavirus cases have exceeded 100,000 over the weekend and spread to more
than 100 countries and regions. In addition to battling virus, China is quickly
recovering as the world’s factory, shifting from a receiver of support to an
active contributor to the global virus fight, which has become more intensive
due to recent case surges in Europe and the US.
In face
of fast rise of confirmed cases, which has made several states declare a state
of emergency, US administration, struggling to cope with a shortage of medical
devices such as face masks, protective suits and test kits, lifted import
restrictions by granting tariff relief for medical equipment. Meanwhile, demand
for such equipment in European countries such as Italy and France keeps
growing.
“China
encourages domestic makers of medical goods and preventive supplies to meet
growing overseas demand,” Cao Xuejun, an official from the Ministry of Industry
and Information Technology (MIIT), was quoted as saying in recent media
reports. Meanwhile, the Ministry of Commerce said the country imposes no export
bans on masks.
Currently,
Chinese face mask manufacturers mainly produce to meet domestic supply amid the
outbreak by motivating domestic enterprises, some of which, including
automakers and smartphone manufacturers, have turned part of their main
business to producing masks in a difficult time.
After more
than a month of collective efforts in China, the country, also the world’s
manufacturing hub, is gradually recovering its production capacity, which also
has been achieved through mobilization of national resources, including
state-owned enterprises transferring production lines to making masks. Many
countries have provided their support to China at the early stages of the
outbreak. As long as the country is capable of meeting domestic demand, it
would be ready to return the favor, according to Chinese officials.
As the
world’s largest producer of face masks, China has an annual output accounting
for 50 percent global total and daily maximum outputs of more than 100 million,
according to the MIIT. The country has also the most comprehensive supply chain
including equipment and melt-blown fabric for producing masks, according to
industry insiders.
Besides
general masks, the daily manufacturing capacity of N95 masks has grown from
about 200,000 to 1.6 million.
Shanghai
Dragon Corp, a producer of underwear, which has been producing face masks since
the beginning of the coronavirus outbreak, now produces millions of face masks
every day. Although it is now mainly fulfilling domestic demand, it has been
looking into overseas demand given the rapid spread at global level.
“We are
trying to understand how many masks they need in Japan, South Korea, countries
in Europe, and also the US, as well as factoring local import regulations so we
can provide relevant testing procedures for future exports,” Tony Tan, vice
general manager at Shanghai Dragon Corp, told the Global Times over the
weekend.
Some
Chinese exporters, who have sales channels in Europe and the US, have been
suggested to consider working with local factories that produce masks,
protective suits and test kits to expand exports to overseas markets, Mei
Xinyu, an expert close to China’s commerce ministry, told the Global Times on March
8.
“As
China resumes work, Chinese factories could potentially become the world’s ‘arsenal’
in fighting the coronavirus,” Mei said.
The top
priority remains to fulfill domestic need given China is still at critical
stage of fighting the deadly disease, while the next step, as the world’s
factory, has to look into demand overseas, which also reflects the country’s
vision for a community with shared future for mankind.
China’s lessons
The
World Health Organization said on Saturday, March 7, that China contributed $20
million to bolster the global fight against the COVID-19. Apart from donations,
China has also offered valuable experience and lessons towards fighting the
virus, as the WHO said the country is demonstrating that the viral spread can
be slowed and negative impacts reduced through the use of universally
applicable action.
Those
actions include working across society to identify people who are sick,
bringing them to care, following up on contacts, preparing hospitals and
clinics to manage a surge in patients, and training healthcare workers.
To
identify confirmed and suspected cases, some countries have been testing
aggressively, even expanding the scope of testing to people with mild or no
symptom that may mask viral transmission. Mass testing has also driven up
demand for test kits, and to help meet the global demand, some Chinese
companies are consulting overseas customers about actual demands, and preparing
for an increase of exports, as of now China is fully able to fulfill domestic
demand and more than 10 enterprises are capable of producing test kits.
For
instance, a leading private genome sequencing company BGI Group told the Global
Times in a recent interview that as of Monday, March 9, it has received orders
for testing over 310,000 people from overseas and those shipments have arrived
in 26 countries and regions.
A
manager at a Shanghai-based test kit producing company said some test kit
producers in Shanghai and Eastern China’s Zhejiang Province have been
considering exporting their products and his own company is applying for EU
certificates while a local customer in Europe contacted them for consultations
regarding business, considering China’s massive output of testing kits.
“They
asked us if we could provide test kits for 30,000 people. If we could help
other virus-stricken countries, it’s good, and it’s also beneficial for us to
export test kits made in China to the rest of the world,” he said, preferring
not to be identified.
As a
stabilizer of the global economy, China plays an irreplaceable role in the
global supply chain, especially when other countries have been struggling in
meeting domestic demand. While China resumes work and stabilizes supply, it
would only gradually resume supply to overseas markets in order to tackle the
domestic supply-demand issue amid the outbreak.
“China
was the country hit earliest by the epidemic and implemented measures to help
itself which also provided a window of opportunity for the world,” COVID-19
observer surnamed Huang said, noting that now the country strives to resume
work with the aim of fighting for another window of opportunity.
As
result, the world’s factory should push forward with resumption of work firmly,
aiming to gain more momentum for the world’s economy, she said.
Global sharing
The
recent WHO-China joint mission report calls China’s vigorous public health
measures toward COVID-19 probably the most “ambitious, agile and aggressive
disease containment effort in history” by following the principle of early
identification, and proper treatment with medical support.
Other
experiences and lessons from China include authorities stepping in quickly,
taking aggressive measures by cutting off transmission routes, building Fang
Cang makeshift hospitals to prevent cluster infections and banning public
gatherings. Countries like Italy began adopting such policies to shut down
public places and schools while Iran has set up a makeshift hospital in Qom.
Although
there are no specific antiviral or immune modulating agents (or recommended) to
improve outcomes, according to the report, some measures that China has used in
treating COVID-19 patients, especially those in critical conditions, are now
studied and carefully examined in other countries, according to medical
experts.
Some
foreign countries have also started to develop plasma products to treat
COVID-19 as China did before. For example, Takeda Pharmaceutical Company
Limited based in Tokyo, Japan, announced on March 4 that it is developing a
hyperimmune globulin to treat high-risk individuals with COVID-19.
Hyperimmune
globulins are plasma derived-therapies that have previously been shown to be
effective in the treatment of severe acute viral respiratory infections, a
Beijing-based immunology expert told the Global Times on Sunday, March 8, on
the condition of anonymity.
Chinese
companies are mixing recovered patients’ plasma together and injecting them into
current patients. It is an emergency measure due to the urgency of the epidemic
but brings about problems and uncertainty as doctors can’t decide what element
is exactly working against COVID-19 and the risk of it containing other kind of
pathogens exist, according to the expert.
“Instead,
hyperimmune globulins therapies are made of the antibodies that work directly
against the novel coronavirus. It is more direct and effective,” he said,
noting that more countries may join in exploring plasma products but probably
would apply different methods and conduct more research on safety and
effectiveness, which China has not had much time to do.
Some
Chinese doctors at Wuhan Tongji hospital also shared their experiences in
dealing with COVID-19 with their Italian counterparts via a teleconference
during which Enrico Ammirati, a cardiologist at Niguarda Hospital in Milan,
asked what kinds of masks and protective suits Chinese doctors are using in
intensive units and in wards, as well as medical treatments recommended.
Today’s
China, which has been familiar with the role it plays, understands clearly its
own responsibilities and has the capability of contributing more to the world,
according to analysts.
Source:Global
Times
Wenzhou volunteers help transport
donations related to COVID-19 for Italy. Photo: Courtesy of Blazing Youth
China to back global virus fight with production boost
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