Vodafone and Controlant enhance pharma supply chain
- December 2, 2024
- Steve Rogerson
- Vodafone Business
Vodafone Business IoT and Controlant are working together to make the pharmaceutical supply chain more sustainable.
Their aim is to reduce the waste of perishable medicines and help distributors avoid the unnecessary carbon emissions created by redelivery.
Safeguarding the delivery of temperature-sensitive medicines remains a persistent problem for the global pharmaceutical supply chain. Distributors that are unable to monitor the environmental status of their shipments in real time risk losing vast quantities of perishable medicines and vaccines, worth around $30bn each year.
In a report, independent consultancy Carbon Trust found that Vodafone Business IoT and Controlant’s offering has avoided 53kg of carbon dioxide emissions (CO2e) per box of medicines delivered when compared with industry averages. This is around 15% of industry average emissions produced across the lifecycle of medicines.
Carbon Trust says this equates to a total of 16,700 tonnes of CO2e avoided for Controlant’s deliveries made in 2022.
Icelandic firm Controlant, founded in 2007, provides pharma and logistics companies with environmental monitoring technology that provides data on the temperature, location and light exposure of perishable medicines during transit.
This real-time monitoring relies on Controlant’s Saga reusable data loggers with IoT connectivity (www.controlant.com/devices). These alert companies if products go out of a set temperature range and enable urgent preventative action. There are more than 200,000 Saga devices in circulation at any time, all being monitored through a centralised platform.
It is essential that Saga devices remain connected for the entirety of a transit process. For international deliveries, they need reliable connectivity regardless of the mode of transport or continent in which they are travelling. Each device contains a Vodafone SIM, which provides them with reliable and secure connectivity through 570 different networks in more than 180 countries worldwide.
“Vodafone is at the forefront when it comes to IoT connectivity,” said Controlant (www.controlant.com) co-CEO Gísli Herjólfsson. “Without them, we wouldn’t be able to have our devices speak to us and let us know if something goes wrong. Having Vodafone as a central partner means that everything just flows seamlessly, no matter where you come from or where you’re going.”
Since implementing IoT technology, Controlant’s pharmaceutical supply chain customers have reported successful delivery rates of more than 99%. Before, they could expect a typical loss rate of perishable medicines of around 35%.
In the last financial year, Vodafone Business helped customers avoid around 32.8 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions through its digital technology. Vodafone Business IoT (www.vodafone.com/about-vodafone/what-we-do/internet-of-things) services such as fleet management, smart metering, connected solar panels and remote patient monitoring have helped its customers save around 78 million tonnes of emissions since 2020.