Every few seconds, a batch of white plastic cases shoots along a conveyor belt in a South Korean factory –- coronavirus test kits destined for export around the world as the global pandemic sends demand soaring.
SD Biosensor is one of five South Korean companies whose COVID-19 diagnostic tests are being used in the country, where a huge “trace, test and treat” effort appears to have brought the epidemic under control.
The factory on a nondescript industrial estate in Cheongju, south of Seoul, is ramping up production of kits that could be crucial to the world’s anti-virus efforts.
It is now making 350,000 tests a day—almost as many as the South has used in the entire outbreak so far—up from 20,000 in January.
And managers plan to start 24-hour operations next month, taking daily output to more than a million.
“Treatment for the virus begins with accurate diagnosis,” company vice president Park June told AFP.
“I have been in the diagnostic industry for 35 years and never I have felt such a strong spotlight on our work,” he added.
The company is already exporting to eight countries including Germany, Iran, India and Italy, and is in discussions with around 60 more, led by the United States—which has now confirmed more cases than anywhere else in the world.
Controversy has swirled around the Trump administration’s response to the outbreak, with accusations of insufficient preparations, and South Korean President Moon Jae-in said this week that his US counterpart had asked for test kits, although the White House has not confirmed the request.
Park anticipates Washington’s Food and Drug Administration will grant his firm an emergency use authorisation next week, and expects the US will become its “biggest export market”.
Clinical trial
More than 100 workers in white protective suits staff the production lines, where machines pump out the tests at the rate of 2.5 per second.
SD Biosensor began developing its tests in January, soon after the virus first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan.
The South Korean government issued an emergency authorisation for their use in just two weeks, expediting a clinical trial process that usually takes a year to complete.
That speed was a key factor in the South’s rapid scaling-up of its testing programme—a result of its painful experience in dealing with the 2015 Middle East Respiratory Syndrome outbreak, when 38 people died.
Nearly 120 countries are now seeking to secure South Korean-made tests, a foreign ministry official told Yonhap news agency on Friday, either as purchases or humanitarian aid.
Seoul was prioritising the US, United Arab Emirates and Indonesia, he said.
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