Frankfurt pharma hub prepares for Covid vaccine task
Published: 11:11 AM,Nov 30,2020 | EDITED : 12:04 PM,Apr 29,2024
As a string of Covid-19 vaccines near approval, Frankfurt Airport staff are gearing up to handle the unprecedented logistical challenge of transporting millions of life-saving doses worldwide.
Frankfurt is Europe's largest hub for transporting pharmaceutical goods, and will be key to the success of inoculating millions of people against the deadly coronavirus.
'The stress is increasing now that we're entering the 'hot' phase,' Karin Krestan, Lufthansa Cargo's director of operations, told AFP during a tour of the temperature-controlled 'Cargo Cool Center' terminal.
'The processes have been established, we're very confident and we feel well prepared,' she said.
In fact, Max Philipp Conrady, head of freight infrastructure at Fraport, told AFP: 'We've been ready since August'.
Frankfurt's cargo terminal has been working around the clock since the pandemic began, delivering medicine, surgical gowns and masks and supporting global supply chains as passenger numbers collapsed and airlines grounded planes.
The vast temperature-controlled hangar, a few kilometres from the main passenger terminal, handled 120,000 tons of vaccines, drugs and other pharmaceutical products in 2019, airport operator Fraport said.
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It has 12,000 square metres (129,000 square feet) of temperature-controlled warehouses, essential for storing medicines.
About 8,000 square metres (86,000 square feet), around the size of a football field, handles Lufthansa cargo alone, Krestan said.
Warehouses hum as ventilation systems pump conditioned air and staff buzz around on forklifts. Boxes packed with measles vaccines stand ready for departure.
Frankfurt has 2,000 square metres (21,500 square feet) of cold storage, Krestan said, set at two to eight degrees Celsius (36 to 47 degrees Fahrenheit), which is ideal for vaccines.
Fraport recently boosted investment in high-tech refrigerated 'dollies' that transport vaccines from cold-storage hangars to planes, and now have 20 so several freighters can be loaded at the same time.
Some vaccines, such as one produced by AstraZeneca and Oxford University, can be shipped at normal refrigerator temperatures.
But Pfizer's, developed at the BioNTech lab in Mainz, around 20km (12 miles) from the Frankfurt airport, must remain at around -70 degrees C (-94 F).
That requires car-sized containers which use dry ice to keep contents at stable, ultra-low temperatures.
They can do so for up to 120 hours without a power supply, long enough to reach far-flung destinations.
Krestan, who uses her skills as a former nurse, is sure her team is ready for the task.
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