US Supply chain vs China’s Export Restrictions Strand Medical Goods

China’s Export Restrictions Strand Medical Goods U.S. Needs to Fight Coronavirus, State Department Says.

Products made by 3M, Owens & Minor, PerkinElmer sit in warehouses; GE ventilator production line in Wisconsin nearly brought to a halt.

New Chinese export restrictions have left American companies’ U.S.-bound face masks, test kits and other medical equipment urgently needed to fight the coronavirus stranded, according to businesses and U.S. diplomatic memos. Large quantities of critical protective gear and other medical goods are sitting in warehouses across China unable to receive necessary official clearances, said some suppliers and brokers.

Health-care equipment maker PerkinElmer Inc. , based in Massachusetts, is unable to ship 1.4 million test kits for Covid-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, from its Suzhou factory because it lacks a certification required by the new rules, according to a State Department memo reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

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[… the group of relatives who form Perkins and Co. just might be able to handle his overly enthusiastic opium order]. The firm has spent more than a decade building an elaborate smuggling operation to protect what’s become its most valuable commodity in China. Perkins and Co. was among the first — if not the first — American companies to establish a permanent trading office in Canton. With employees on the scene year-round, the firm can optimize profits on the drug — which is still legal in the United States, but illegal in China.

A Shanghai vice mayor told Minnesota-based conglomerate 3M Co. that the city “relies on 3M’s locally produced N-95 respirators for its Covid-19 prevention efforts and lacks viable alternatives,” a second memo said. The official “signaled that lifting restrictions on distribution of the company’s masks would require instructions from Beijing,” the memo said.

PerkinElmer said it is working with the Chinese government to clear the test kits. 3M said it has received shipments from China and is working to coordinate more, though fewer planes are available than usual.

The policies were instituted this month, and Chinese officials have said they are intended to ensure the quality of exported medical products and to make sure needed goods aren’t being shipped out of China. Instead, they have created bottlenecks at a time of urgent need, according to the suppliers, brokers and the State Department memos.

China’s policies have “disrupted established supply chains for medical products just as these products were most needed for the global response to Covid-19,” according to one of the memos sent this week. The State Department didn’t respond to a request for comment.

QUALITY FROM CHINA HAS ALWAYS SUCKED

 

Asked about the complaints of export problems, Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters in Beijing on Wednesday that China wants to ensure the quality of exported medical products given their importance.

“Countries across the world are all hunting for medical supplies, causing a big challenge for China’s efforts of quality control and regulation of export,” the Chinese Embassy in Washington said.

China is an almost irreplaceable supplier, making more than 40% of the world’s imports of masks, gloves, goggles, visors and medical garments, according to the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Beijing was then hit with complaints from European countries about the quality of masks, gowns and other products they received. The export restrictions then followed. Chinese customs prohibited the export of medical products without certifications from China’s National Medical Products Administration, even if the goods had been registered with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

On Friday China added another hurdle, subjecting certain types of surgical protective gear and equipment—including ventilators and masks—to extra checks before they could be shipped overseas.

Printed circuit boards used in ventilators manufactured by General Electric Co. sat in a warehouse for five days because of confusion over the new rules, according to people familiar with the matter. Without the shipment, a GE ventilator production line in Wisconsin would likely have run out of parts and have to suspend work.

After days of negotiations between manufacturers, local authorities and a business association, the shipment finally left Shanghai in a plane bound for the U.S. on Sunday, they said.

Others are still stuck. Virginia-based health-care logistics firm Owens & Minor Inc. has a shipment of 2.4 million masks that meet Food and Drug Administration specifications stuck in a warehouse in Shanghai’s Pudong International Airport because the products lack the newly required certification, according to one of the State Department memos. It said hospital operator Emory Healthcare can’t get 100,000 N95 face masks and 40,000 isolation gowns out of China for the same reason.

Cellex Inc., a biotech company based in North Carolina that has received inquiries from at least four state governments eager to purchase their coronavirus antibody tests, hasn’t been able to fill orders without the Chinese certification, despite receiving an FDA emergency-use authorization on April 1, the memo said.

Suppliers said the urgent demand has created a “complete sellers’ market,” with prices changing daily as factories, inundated by offers, dictate minimum purchasing quantities and buying conditions.

Yoko Kubota