 Jim Miller
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During the past decade, big pharmaceutical companies have been making major efforts to restructure their manufacturing networks.
In their haste to shed costs and assets, however, some may be adding risk to their product supply chains.
The number of manufacturing facilities owned and operated by the major pharmaceutical companies mushroomed in the 1980s and
1990s as new blockbuster products were introduced and as companies opened markets globally. In the days before the establishment
of regional free trade pacts, such as the EU and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), much of the industry viewed
having a manufacturing operation in a foreign country as a necessary investment to ensure that country's regulatory approval
of their drug product.
In the past decade, however, companies have determined that they do not need to maintain large, farflung and costly manufacturing
organizations around the globe. Several factors have contributed to the drive to streamline manufacturing networks, including:
- The establishment of the EU and NAFTA, along with various mutual recognition efforts, which has facilitated the approval and
movement of products across borders.
- Mergers among major pharmaceutical companies, which left the merged entities with too much capacity.
- The decline of blockbuster drug sales and the need for less capacity.
- The transition from chemicalbased drugs to biologics, which require different manufacturing assets.
Shedding these redundant assets is not as simple as shutting the doors, however. Transferring products is costly and time
consuming under GMP guidelines. In many countries outside the US, labour laws often require long union negotiations and large
severance payments to affected workers. In all countries, legacy environmental issues can make it difficult to just walk away
from a site.Under these circumstances, selling a facility to a party that intends to maintain it has obvious appeal; such a sale could
help the owner avoid costs incurred in an outright shutdown while maintaining some goodwill with the workers, community and
government. It may also generate a little cash.
Two-sided sales
The availability of redundant facilities has been something of a mixed blessing for the contract manufacturing industry. On
one hand, the opportunity has helped some of industry's largest players to quickly and relatively inexpensively build global
networks. Major CMOs, including Patheon (Canada), Recipharm (Sweden), Famar (Greece), Haupt (Germany), Piramal Healthcare
(India) and DSM (The Netherlands), have acquired redundant manufacturing sites from major pharmaceutical companies to build
critical mass; for example, Parisbased Fareva went from zero to E300 million of pharmaceutical manufacturing revenues in just
4 years by acquiring redundant sites in France — principally from Pfizer.
On the other hand, the purchase of these facilities is a bane of the CMO industry because it maintains capacity that the market
really doesn't need. Major CMOs have the experience and industry understanding to recognize when an available facility has
limited marketability. There have been plenty of potential buyers, however, lured by the chance to get into the business for
almost no money down and a cushion of contracts for legacy products. This was particularly true in the easymoney environment
of the past decade.
Too often, the groups that take over these facilities have little knowledge or experience of pharmaceutical manufacturing
or the contract services business. They are especially naïve about the major investment needed in new business development
and the long lead times involved in building market awareness and establishing new client relationships. They may not appreciate
just how far behind the state of the art their facilities and equipment are. Also, they learn the hard way that GMP compliance
is costly and must be maintained regardless of the level of plant utilization. Their working capital resources to cover these
requirements are often inadequate.