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(Repeats SEPT. 27 story. No change to text.)
By Ludwig Burger
FRANKFURT, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Europe's drug makers have warned they may stop making some cheap generic medicines because of surging electricity costs and are calling for an overhaul of the way they are priced, the latest industry to seek help as the energy crisis deepens.
The generic drug industry lobby group Medicines for Europe, which represents companies including Teva, Novartis's Sandoz unit and Fresenius SE's Kabi business, on Tuesday sent an open letter to European Union member states' energy and health ministers ahead of their extraordinary EU Council meeting on Friday, calling for measures to ease the cost burden.
The letter was also addressed to key European Commissioners. The recipients did not respond to requests for comment given the late hour.
Electricity prices have risen ten-fold for some drug factories in Europe and raw material costs have risen by between 50% and 160%, according to the letter.
Generics associations in member states are also petitioning national heath authorities for more flexibility on drug prices, said Medicines for Europe.
"We may discontinue maybe three, maybe five products due to the direct and indirect impact of increasing energy costs," said Elisabeth Stampa, chief executive of Medichem SA, a generic drugs and pharmaceutical ingredients maker based near Barcelona, Spain.
Medicines for Europe's director general Adrian Van Den Hoven told Reuters that higher energy costs were hitting a sector that was forced to consolidate due to price pressure, making the market more vulnerable to supply outages and shortages.
"Higher energy costs just eat all of the margins of many makers of essential medicines in the fixed price system that we operate under in Europe," he said.
The issue centres on the pricing regime. Off-patent medicines are typically sold by low-cost drugmakers at prices set by national health agencies or insurers' associations, which frequently also cut prices.
Generics account for about 70% all dispensed medicines in Europe, many of them to treat serious conditions such as infections or cancer, but make up only 29% of the region's drug bills, according to the lobby group.
The surge in energy costs risks undermining a recent push to boost medicines production in Europe and make the region more self-sufficient after the COVID-19 pandemic exposed a dependence on suppliers abroad and led to a breakdown of certain supply routes.
COVID-lockdown measures in China and the war in Ukraine have made matters worse for logistic and raw material supplies.