Workers of Sanyo Denki inspect component parts cooling fans for various medical equipment like ventilators and virus DNA analyzers. Photo by Johnny R. Reblando
SUBIC BAY FREEPORT — A Japanese company in this freeport is trying to cope with great demand for cooling fans used in mechanical ventilators, which are critical medical equipment used in caring for patients infected by the new coronavirus disease.
Sanyo Denki Philippines, Inc. (SDPI), a locator at the Subic Techno Park here, also used to manufacture uninterruptible power supply (UPS) units, servo amplifiers and stepping motors, but has now devoted its operations to producing cooling fans, said company president Koichi Uchibori.
Uchibori and SDPI design manager Ted Yamazaki, who met with Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority chair and administrator Wilma T. Eisma on Monday at her visit to the company’s factory, said there is growing demand for cooling fans these days because of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Yamazaki said that the company’s cooling fans are used by companies like Siemens, Inogen, and Hitachi for various medical equipment, including mechanical ventilators that move breathable air into and out of the lungs of patients who are physically unable to breathe.
But due to the enhanced community quarantine rules that required export-oriented businesses to house their staff within the freeport zone, Uchibori said company operations have been drastically reduced to 10 percent of the previous capacity.
“The number of cooling fans we produce monthly used to reach 80,000, but we can only produce from 6,000 to 10,000 units now,” Uchibori lamented.
As of last February when the ECQ was not yet in place, Sanyo Denki had a total of 4,273 workers, including those under contract with manpower services. Uchibori said the company now operates with only 600 workers who are housed in various hotels inside the Subic Bay Freeport.
“It is expensive keeping them in hotels, and also paying them double,” Uchibori noted. “Still we are ready to take in more, but the problem now is where to house them.”
Uchibori also said that despite the huge overhead for the company’s current operations, SDPI is not charging their customers any extra amount for their in-demand products.
Aside from ventilators, the firm’s cooling fans are also used in X-ray and MRI machines, virus DNA analyzers, blood analyzers, and portable oxygen concentrators.
Hearing Uchibori’s concerns, Eisma assured Sanyo Denki officials that the SBMA will help in easing up the supply chain for the company because of its vital role in the fight against Covid-19.
She also expressed gratitude to the company and its workers for continuing to produce the vital components needed for ventilators and other medical equipment.
“We will help you find ways so that shipment of your raw materials won’t be delayed, and so that you can employ more workers to step up production of this very important product,” Eisma told Uchibori and Yamazaki.
“Subic salutes you for your important role in the fight against the Covid-19 pandemic,” she added. – With SBMA Comm Group