Coonoor polio vaccine unit to be closed
Coonoor Polio Vaccine Unit Closure — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The oral polio vaccine (OPV) production unit at the Pasteur Institute of India (PII), Coonoor (Tamil Nadu) was shut down circa 1974 — a decision that stripped India of its only indigenous OPV manufacturing capacity for decades. [S3]
- The unit was an ICMR project operating within a state-managed institute, creating a classic dual-control governance failure. [S1]
- The closure is cited as a watershed moment in the decline of India's public-sector vaccine manufacturing infrastructure. [S2]
- UPSC relevance: intersects GS-II (health governance, ICMR, parliamentary oversight) and GS-III (biotechnology, public sector R&D).
2. Why in the News
- The article published in The Hindu (March 18, 2026) reproduces/highlights a historical dispatch dated New Delhi, March 17, reporting closure of the OPV unit at PII Coonoor effective March 31. [S1]
- The news resurfaces amid renewed debate on India's dependence on private/foreign vaccine manufacturers and the hollowing out of public-sector bio-manufacturing capacity. [S2]
- The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) of Lok Sabha had formally commented on the dysfunctional state of the unit, adding parliamentary accountability dimension. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1902 | Death of Lily Pakenham Walsh from hydrophobia triggers demand for an anti-rabies institute in India. [S4] |
| 1907 | Pasteur Institute of India (PII) established at Coonoor, Tamil Nadu (Nilgiris). [S4] |
| 1966 | Albert Sabin donates OPV strains to PII Coonoor; personally trains staff in OPV manufacture. [S3] |
| 1968–1974 | PII successfully manufactures OPV; 6 batches released under leadership of Veeraraghavan and Balasubramanian. [S3] |
| ~1974 | OPV unit closed down instead of expanding capacity, despite WHO preparing global EPI rollout. [S3] |
| 1974 | WHO launches Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) globally — India's closure is directly counter to this global momentum. [S3] |
| 2008–2010 | Government suspends manufacturing licences of PII Coonoor, CRI Kasauli, and BCG Vaccine Lab Chennai over protocol violations; licences restored February 2010. [S3] |
4. Core Static Facts
- Institute name: Pasteur Institute of India (PII), Coonoor
- Location: Coonoor, Nilgiris district, Tamil Nadu
- Established: 1907
- Managing body: An Association (non-governmental management), with the OPV unit funded via Central grants routed through ICMR [S1]
- Vaccine produced: Trivalent Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) — Sabin strain [S3]
- Parent ministry (OPV unit): Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (via ICMR) [S1]
- Batches released: 6 (1968–1974) [S3]
- Vaccine strain source: Donated by Albert Sabin in 1966 [S3]
- Parliamentary oversight body that flagged dysfunction: Public Accounts Committee (PAC), Lok Sabha [S1]
- Key governance defect: Dual control — OPV unit was ICMR project housed inside institute managed by a separate Association; created "lack of rapport between unit staff and Institute Director" [S1]
- Closure rationale: Technical expert opinion that reviving unit required "very heavy expenditure" with doubtful output quality [S1]
- Post-closure consequence: No Indian manufacturer produced OPV indigenously for decades thereafter [S3]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Scientific / Technological
- PII Coonoor was India's only indigenous OPV manufacturing site; its closure created a critical gap during the global polio eradication push. [S3]
- The unit had demonstrated technical viability (6 successful batches), making closure a policy failure, not a scientific one. [S3]
- India's failure to scale up in 1974 forced long-term dependence on imported or private-sector OPV, weakening vaccine sovereignty.
Administrative / Governance
- Dual-control structure — a recurring Indian public-sector failure: central funding (ICMR), but no central authority over institute staff (managed by Association). [S1]
- The PAC of Lok Sabha had flagged this as a "sorry state of affairs," yet no corrective action was taken — a classic case of audit findings not translating to executive action. [S1]
- A proposal to hand the institute to the Centre was floated but not acted upon promptly, illustrating inter-institutional inertia. [S1]
Economic
- Closure of a functional (albeit sub-optimal) public vaccine unit led to long-run import dependency costs and reduced bargaining power in vaccine procurement. [S2]
- Investment in reviving the unit was deemed too high by experts — but the long-term cost of non-revival was far greater in terms of National Immunisation Programme expenditure. [S3]
Social / Public Health
- India was a hyper-endemic country for polio until 2014 (certified polio-free). Loss of domestic OPV capacity during the most critical vaccination decades (1974–2000) affected programmatic immunization reach. [S3]
- Pulse Polio Immunisation (PPI) launched 1994–95 had to rely entirely on private and international suppliers; indigenous capacity could have reduced costs and supply-chain risks. [S3]
Legal / Constitutional
- The OPV unit operated under Central grants via ICMR; the parent institute was under a private Association — creating ambiguity in accountability under Article 12 (definition of "State" for fundamental rights obligations). [S1]
- The move to hand over PII to the Centre would have required legislative/administrative steps aligning with Seventh Schedule (Union List Entry 26: pharmaceutical standards). [S1]
Historical
- Mirrors the broader pattern of India building public-sector vaccine institutions in the colonial/early independence era (CRI Kasauli 1905, PII Coonoor 1907, BCG Lab Chennai 1948) and then allowing them to decay through under-investment and governance neglect. [S2]
- Repeated licence suspensions (2008–10) of the same trio of public-sector labs confirms the structural rot was never addressed. [S3]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- March 2026: The Hindu republishes/highlights the historical article on OPV unit closure, prompting renewed discussion on public-sector vaccine manufacturing revival. [S1]
- India's vaccine self-reliance discourse has intensified post-COVID-19 (Atmanirbhar Bharat in pharma); the Coonoor case is cited as a cautionary historical precedent. [S2]
- 2008–2010 licence suspension of PII Coonoor (along with CRI Kasauli and BCG Lab Chennai) for Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) non-compliance was revoked in February 2010 to safeguard vaccine security. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Pasteur Institute of India, Coonoor was established in 1907 — prompted by a hydrophobia death in 1902. [S4]
- PII Coonoor is located in the Nilgiris district, Tamil Nadu. [S4]
- Albert Sabin donated OPV strains to PII Coonoor in 1966 and personally trained institute staff. [S3]
- PII Coonoor released 6 batches of OPV between 1968 and 1974 under Veeraraghavan and Balasubramanian. [S3]
- The OPV production unit was funded via Central grants routed through ICMR (not directly by the Health Ministry). [S1]
- The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) of Lok Sabha formally commented on the dysfunctional state of the OPV unit. [S1]
- The key governance defect cited was "dual control" — ICMR project inside an Association-managed institute. [S1]
- After PII Coonoor's OPV unit closed (~1974), no Indian manufacturer produced OPV indigenously for decades. [S3]
- WHO launched the Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) globally in 1974 — the same year India shut its only OPV unit. [S3]
- In 2008, the government suspended manufacturing licences of three public-sector vaccine labs: PII Coonoor, CRI Kasauli, and BCG Vaccine Laboratory, Chennai. [S3]
- Licences of the above three labs were restored in February 2010 in "larger public interest of vaccine security." [S3]
- PII Coonoor also developed India's first indigenous trivalent OPV and conducted research on Vero cell-derived rabies vaccine. [S4]
- National Institute of Nutrition (NIN), part of ICMR, traces its origins to Beri-Beri research at PII Coonoor. [S4]
- The implementing ministry for the OPV unit was the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (via ICMR). [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
- GS-II: Governance — Issues relating to development and management of social sector (health); role of Parliament (PAC oversight); functioning of autonomous bodies under Central grants.
- GS-III: Science & Technology — Indigenization of technology; biotechnology; India's pharmaceutical self-reliance; public-sector R&D institutions.
Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The closure of the OPV unit at Pasteur Institute of India, Coonoor in the 1970s exemplifies the governance pathologies that have plagued India's public-sector vaccine manufacturing. Critically examine." (GS-II) 2. "India's journey to becoming polio-free by 2014 was a public health triumph, yet it was achieved despite — not because of — its indigenous vaccine manufacturing capacity. Discuss with reference to Pulse Polio Immunisation and institutional factors." (GS-II/III) 3. "How has dual-control of central-grant projects housed in state/autonomous institutions impeded India's science and technology infrastructure? Illustrate with examples." (GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Pulse Polio Immunisation Programme (1994–95) | Direct successor effort to eradicate polio after domestic OPV capacity was lost |
| India's Polio Eradication (2014 — WHO certification) | Policy outcome shaped by the capacity gap this closure created |
| ICMR — Structure, mandate, autonomous bodies | ICMR was the funding conduit for the OPV unit; understanding its governance is essential |
| Central Research Institute (CRI), Kasauli | Sister public-sector vaccine lab; faced same 2008 licence suspension |
| Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) / Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) | Global and Indian immunisation architecture within which OPV sits |
| Atmanirbhar Bharat in Pharmaceuticals / PLI Scheme for Pharma | Current policy response to the self-reliance gap exemplified by the Coonoor closure |
| Public Accounts Committee (PAC) — Role and powers | PAC flagged this failure; understanding PAC's constitutional role is Prelims/Mains staple |
| Vaccine nationalism and COVAX | Modern echo of the same sovereignty debate that Coonoor's closure triggered in the 1970s |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing PII Coonoor with CRI Kasauli: Both are colonial-era public vaccine labs, but CRI Kasauli (est. 1905, Himachal Pradesh) makes different vaccines; PII Coonoor (est. 1907, Tamil Nadu) was the OPV site. Different states, different products.
- Assuming ICMR directly managed the institute: ICMR provided Central grants to the OPV unit, but the Pasteur Institute itself was managed by an Association — the dual-control tension arose precisely from this split.
- Attributing closure to scientific failure: The closure was a governance and funding decision, not a technical one — experts noted the unit had produced acceptable vaccine; the issue was cost of revival and institutional dysfunction.
- Wrong closure date: The OPV unit closure happened circa 1974 (after 6 batches, 1968–74); a separate licence suspension occurred in 2008 (revoked 2010) — these are two distinct events frequently conflated.
- Confusing OPV (Sabin) with IPV (Salk): The PII unit produced Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) — the Sabin strain administered orally; not the Injectable Polio Vaccine (IPV/Salk strain), which India later introduced under UIP from 2015.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Coonoor polio vaccine unit to be closed" — The Hindu (March 18, 2026, archival article dated New Delhi, March 17) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-18/th_international/articleGBRFNSNL6-13898819.ece — (Tier 4; primary article)
- [S2] "How India faltered and frittered away its 'vaccine' expertise built since 1850" — National Herald India — https://www.nationalheraldindia.com/india/how-india-faltered-and-frittered-away-its-vaccine-expertise-built-since-1850 — (Tier 4)
- [S3] "A brief history of vaccines & vaccination in India" / "Eradicating poliomyelitis: India's journey from hyperendemic to polio-free status" — ICMR / Indian Journal of Medical Research — https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4078488/ ; https://ijmr.org.in/eradicating-poliomyelitis-indias-journey-from-hyperendemic-to-polio-free-status/ — (Tier 3)
- [S4] "Pasteur Institute of India" — Wikipedia / Pasteur Institute of India official site — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasteur_Institute_of_India ; https://www.pasteurinstituteindia.com/pasteur-institute-of-india/ — (Reference)