Life Sciences In The Air
David
Y. Bang is CEO of LifeConEx LLC, a joint venture between DHL Global Forwarding
and Lufthansa Cargo. LifeConEx is the only industry-specific provider
of integrated end-to-end
temperature controlled transportation solutions for the life sciences
industry.
Lufthansa
Cargo and DHL Global Forwarding saw there was a need for temperature-sensitive
cargo service for the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and life-science industries,
and in 2005 decided it would be smart to start a company specializing
in just such transport—they haven’t looked back since.
LifeConEx, which is short for Life Sciences,
Connectivity & Control, Expediting & Expertise, says today it’s
the only industry-specific provider of integrated end-to-end temperature
controlled transportation dedicated to the pharmaceutical, biotechnology
and life-science industry.
There is some debate in the scientific community
whether life sciences and biotechnology aren’t actually the same
thing.
In the most simplified of terms, both use
living organisms to make, or aid in making products or processes.
Some of the applications range from the
production of pharmaceuticals and chemicals to fuels and plastics.
The United Nations Convention on Biological
Diversity said "Biotechnology means any technological application
that uses biological systems, living organisms, or derivatives thereof,
to make or modify products or processes for specific use."
Plantation, Florida-based LifeConEx says
their premise is that through the security of better transportation, monitoring,
management, documentation and information, as well as integrating processes
of the airlines, ground handlers and freight forwarders, pharmaceutical
and life-science companies will reap a better return on their investments.
The customers have access to much of the
data 24/7, and LifeConEx says it covers most of the major airports in
the world.
LifeConEx takes measures to provide the aforementioned features, reducing
risks of transport when pharmaceutical and life-science products become
ready to ship, regardless of their stage - sometimes living biological
elements, raw materials or finished products in development, trial or
marketing phases.
“LifeConEx’s unique value proposition
is to integrate the processes from the airlines, forwarder, and ground
handlers,” Shauna Biersey, a company spokeswoman told FlyingTypers.
“Additionally, LifeConEx has a 24/7 Life Science Service Center,
where each shipment is monitored and documented at each pre-determined
milestone.”
LifeConEx would only say the 50-50 joint
venture generates revenues “in the millions,” and that it’s
seeing strong double digit year-on-year sales growth. The company wouldn’t
provide an outlook for the current year, offering only “the biotechnology
sector has a huge growth potential for LifeConEx as well as potential
for our parent companies.”
It also noted that the biological market
is growing at twice the rate of the traditional chemical-based pharmaceutical
market and that there has been a regulatory agency push for better quality
in the transit chain.
That should simply equate to more solutions
for the pharma-bio-life industry, and added business for LifeConEx in
future.
George Frey
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