Turkish defence and electronics firms are teaming up to produce 5,000 ventilators to help treat coronavirus patients, the head of a military drone manufacturer said on Tuesday.
Baykar Chief Executive Haluk Bayraktar said 100 engineers from his company, defence contractor Aselsan and household electronics maker Arcelik were working together to have the ventilators ready by the end of May.
They will be accelerating production of a ventilator made by Turkish biomedical company Biosys, of which only 12 are currently being used.
“Initially, we are racing to deliver 1,000 ventilators by mid-April,” he told Reuters, adding that they would be handed over to Turkey’s Health Ministry.
Turkey diagnosed its first coronavirus patient less than three weeks ago, but the number of cases has surged since then to more than 13,000, with 847 people in intensive care.
Governments and hospitals globally have pleaded with manufacturers to speed up production of ventilators to cope with a surge in patients struggling to breathe.
Turkish technology venture, BIOSYS, has produced the first domestic life-saving ventilator amid coronavirus outbreak pic.twitter.com/JWxoXknUnk
— TRT World (@trtworld) March 30, 2020
Bayraktar said some components were currently being procured from abroad while his company and Aselsan set up a domestic supply network for the ventilator components.
The military companies will make the parts for the ventilator, which will be mass produced by Arcelik.
“It is possible to produce this ventilator for $6,500 while an imported equivalent would cost some 20,000 euros,” he said. “This is the first step of mass production, the costs might fall as production numbers increase.”
Baykar’s military unmanned aerial vehicles have played a crucial role in Turkish cross-border operations against YPG/PKK terrorists in northeast Syria and against Syrian regime forces in Idlib province.
He said some companies have paid for the production of more than 1,000 ventilators to be given to the Health Ministry as part of a charity campaign initiated by his company.
Haluk Gorgun, the CEO of Aselsan, said the defence company had also ordered 250 devices from Biosys.
“We have decided not only to order the device, but also to provide engineering and infrastructur e support to all domestic and national companies, which are making production in this field,” he noted.
Ahmet Hamdi Atalay, the general manager of Havelsan, said the company would also support the production of the indigenous device.
Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI) will also participate in the campaign, Temel Kotil, the head of the company, announced.
After the firms’ messages of support, Mustafa Varank, the country’s minister of technology and industry, tweeted that the ministry would continue with its national technology movement in the health sector.
Other countries have also sought to step up ventilator production. Britain has ordered 10,000 devices from a consortium of leading aerospace, engineering and Formula One racing companies, while in the United States Ford Motor Co said it will produce 50,000 over the next 100 days.
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