When Pfizer/BioNTech announced the release of their life-saving Covid-19 vaccine in 2021, the race was on to ensure continuity and quality of supply. This blog post tells the story of how ESCATEC helped Controlant (Pfizer’s supply chain visibility partner) ramp up the manufacture of its cold chain monitoring device.
In Autumn 2020 the Covid-19 pandemic was at its peak. With a highly transmittable virus, a global case to mortality rate running at 3% and no available vaccine, the world was in a fresh round of lock-downs.
Then, in November 2020, there was a breakthrough. A tested and reliable vaccine was finally within reach. By December approval of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine had been fast-tracked by UK regulators. Pfizer was ready to ship doses.
But there was a major logistical issue that was threatening a smooth rollout.
The vaccine needed to be stored between minus 112F and minus 94F to retain its efficacy. For reference, that’s about 20 degrees colder than conditions at the South Pole. Not only that, but it had a shelf life of five days after being transferred from ultracold storage to a refrigerator, leaving a short window to administer.
The race was on to ensure continuity and quality of supply. Global cold chain supply lines had to be radically optimised to eliminate bottlenecks and waste. Pfizer now had to oversee the safe delivery of hundreds of millions of shots at the required temperature and prove to regulators they were doing so.
To start with, the company created specially designed deep-freeze "suitcases" that could be tightly sealed and shipped even in non-refrigerated trucks.
Meanwhile, the Icelandic company Controlant was selected to deliver the IoT technology that could ensure proactive quality management during transit and storage. Tanya Alcorn of Pfizer announced the partnership in December 2020:
"We selected Controlant’s innovative technology and platform to track and monitor the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccines during shipment… Controlant’s reusable, real-time data loggers and visibility and analysis platform integrates Pfizer’s existing control tower technologies to help manage temperature proactively, identify and react to any events that can impact the supply chain, all while automating quality and logistics processes".
Orders quickly mounted, with a deal struck to deliver 1.8 billion doses across the EU by 2023.
With governments around the world desperate to bring their populations out of lockdown, protect the vulnerable and reanimate their economies - the pressure was on to accelerate the pace of distribution.
This is the largest mass vaccination campaign and the most rapid one in human history. The first hurdle standing between these life-saving vaccines and the general public are a myriad of supply chain complexities – from manufacturing to transportation to storage.
Andrew Heinrich, Yale School of Public Health
Controlant needed to build more tracking devices to meet unprecedented global demand.
But this would be no easy task.
As delivery challenges evolved, both Pfizer and Controlant needed to look at their cold chain tracking solutions to:
In early 2021 the company partnered with ESCATEC to scale the manufacture and supply of two vital components for the IoT data loggers used to monitor temperature.
Right from the start ESCATEC were looking to proactively support on quality.
The NPI team at ESCATEC applied DfM (Design for Manufacturing), to isolate multiple product enhancements and improve he effectiveness of the data loggers. Modifications were shared with the client and designs readied for the next stage. The entire turnaround time from receiving the initial designs to making the recommended changes took less than two weeks.
In the teeth of a pandemic that had disrupted global supply chains and decimated the available workforce, ESCATEC were able to lever decades of expertise to fulfil production requirements in record time:
ESCATECs training department initiated an intensive training programme for the newly recruited staff and the supervisory team assigned to the project.
But the start of mass production was still hugely challenging. Further modifications of the designs were required, some processes had to be revamped while machinery and equipment had to be further calibrated.
With recruitment curtailed during the government’s Movement Control Order, the production operators needed more time to hone their skills on these new products. As volumes started increasing, even office staff were drafted in on a roster to help on the assembly lines.
Throughout 2021 ESCATEC introduced cutting-edge machinery to automate the soldering, gluing, and screwing processes for the product.
At the height of demand, the facility was producing 170,000 units per month for Controlant, whose cold chain as service tech supported the delivery of billions of vaccines across the world with a reported 99.99% success rate.
As the pandemic ravaged supply chains and restricted access to skilled labour, ESCATEC were able to automate production and further value engineer complex designs to meet changing demand and maximise performance.
Together with Controlant, they supported the rapid scaling of the cold chain monitoring device which facilitated the largest and fastest global vaccination programme in human history.