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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Ineos hand sanitiser plant up and running ahead of 10-day target

Chemicals giant has used an empty unit at its site in Newton Aycliffe, County Durham, for the pop-up factory

Inside the new Ineos hand sanitiser plant at Newton Aycliffe(Image: Chris Auld Photography Ltd)

Chemicals company Ineos has started production at a plant that will make a million bottles of hand sanitiser a month after beating its target to build a new plant to make the vital gel within 10 days.

The firm, which is already making hand sanitiser at its Scotland and Germany plants, started out on the project to create the new facility at Newton Aycliffe, County Durham, two weeks ago, despite similar projects usually taking six months or more.

Ineos unveiled its plans to counter hand-to-mouth contamination, which is one of the main ways that the Coronavirus infects people, in response to the critical shortage of hand sanitisers across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and Europe.

With the firm already making pure ethanol, one of the raw materials needed for hand sanitiser, at its Grangemouth plant, Ineos created the plan to make the gel itself.

The plant is now up and running, having started producing the sanitiser at the weekend, running three shifts around the clock in a spare building at its existing site in Newton Aycliffe, County Durham.

Hand sanitiser being made at the Ineos plant in Newton Aycliffe

It said it is focusing on meeting the needs of front line medical and care services as well as making “pocket bottle” hand sanitisers available for people’s personal use.

Sir Jim Ratcliffe, founder and chairman of Ineos, said: “Now that production of the Ineos hand sanitiser has started, we are working on the fastest way to get them to where they need to be.

“I am confident that within a few days our sanitiser will start to be seen in hospitals, surgeries and people’s homes.”