Celltrion acquires US pharmaceutical plant


Celltrion Group chair and founder Seo Jung-jin. — The Korea Herald

SEOUL: Celltrion has clinched a deal with US pharmaceutical firm Eli Lilly to acquire a biopharmaceutical manufacturing plant in Branchburg, New Jersey, for US$330mil, the South Korean biosimilar maker said.

According to Celltrion, the initial investment will be US$500mil in total including the operating costs of the plant.

The company also said it intended to expand production facilities on an unused site within the newly acquired plant, with the expected cost at least another US$500mil.

As a result, Celltrion plans to spend at least US$1bil – or 1.4 trillion won – on the New Jersey plant’s acquisition and expansion in the future.

“The 1.4 trillion won investment in the US plant makes more economic sense than building a new plant in South Korea,” Celltrion Group chair and founder Seo Jung-jin said in an online video conference.

“Further, this will make us completely free from tariff risks.

“We are in the process of getting the US government’s approval by the end of this year and getting our products validated, which will take about a year.

“So by the end of 2026, half of the plant will produce our products while the other half will produce Eli Lilly’s products.”

Along with the takeover, Celltrion also inked a manufacturing organisation contract deal with Eli Lilly.

As the New Jersey plant is currently in operation as a current Good Manufacturing Practice drug substance production site, Celltrion noted that the takeover will save the company time and costs.

According to Seo, the management deemed that a new factory would cost 1.5 trillion won more and take about six years longer to set up, as the existing American employees will continue to work at the site.

Once the expansion of the New Jersey plant is complete, Celltrion estimates that it would have an annual production capacity about 50% larger than its Plant 2 in Songdo, Incheon, which would be equivalent to 135,000 litres per year.

As for the possibility of securing a production foothold in Europe, the Celltrion Group chief said it is one of the things that he has been thinking about.

“Since the United States imposed tariffs, Europe may follow in its footsteps,” said Seo. “If so, we might have to secure certain sites in Europe, but we are not seeing such movement in Europe yet.” — The Korea Herald/ANN

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