by Julia Spies (@Julia_Spies) and Maria Cantero (@MariaMCanteroG)
On 3 March, the World Health OrganizationÌýÌýwould have to ramp up by 40% to meet the surge in international demand¹. Breaking the numbers down to the regional level implies that Africa alone needs 15.3 million masks, 5.2 million gowns, 273,300 goggles, 13.1 million gloves and half a million litres of disinfectants every month.
Africa’s import dependency
The world supply of personal protective equipment is concentrated: four countries – China, the United States, Germany and Malaysia – account for half of global exports. Africa sources predominantly from the European Union (EU) and China. The top five exporters per product together account for three-quarters of African imports.
Some of the key suppliers of health products to Africa have recently introducedÌý, complicating the continent’s access to these essential materials. Access to goggles is particularly difficult as on average, 76% of African imports are subject to temporary trade measures. As a response to these shortages, African countries could consider ramping up regional production by adding value to available inputs and by cooperating with regional and global partners.
Building up regional supply capacities in medical products
Currently, only one in six litres of Africa’s disinfectant imports come from regional suppliers. By strengthening regional and global cooperation, this share could grow.
Disinfectants require three inputs: ethanol diluted with distilled water, glycerine, and plastic bottles. Africa already produces ethanol, plastic bottles and caps in sufficient quantities. Providing nearly half a million bottles and caps corresponds to a fraction of Africa’s monthly exports of these products (0.2% and 0.1%), with Egypt and South Africa being the main suppliers. Likewise, the required 374,000 litres of ethanol constitute only 1.5% of the continent’s current monthly exports.
Local glycerine production, however, might be insufficient to meeting the requirements for disinfectant production, calling for a global sourcing strategy in the short run². South Africa, the continent’s only net exporter of disinfectants, sources glycerine mostly from Malaysia and Argentina. An alternative supplier could be Germany with anÌýl for glycerine of $2.9 million to South Africa, and $6.7 million to all Africa.
For surgical gloves, Africa currently relies almost entirely on imports from non-African suppliers. Malaysia, China and India account for 84% of total imports. While surgical grade gloves can be produced using different types of materials, the most common one is latex. Some African countries have abundant rubber resources and could envisage dedicating some to the production of gloves. By using less than 1% of its monthly exports of latex, Côte d’Ivoire could produce the 13 million gloves that African health responders require each month to face COVID-19. Ghana and Cameroon also have relevant exports of latex but currently do not export any surgical gloves.
A regional response to global supply shortages
In times where the demand for personal protective equipment is increasing sharply, Africa may decide to reinforce regional value chains and local value addition to help scaling up the global supply of these products. This would also contribute to building the region’s resilience against pandemics like COVID-19. Many of the ingredients for a regional strategy in this direction are already in place – and the international community can help leveraging them.