It introduced new products like Halpen, Haltax, Hexpan in 2008. Sati-HIV drugs will be produced from September 2009.[1]
History
HAtL was set up in cooperation with the WHO and UNICEF with the social objective of providing affordable drugs throughout India. It was inaugurated by India's first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru on 10 March 1954. Production began in 1955. It was based on Mahatma Gandhi's vision that the poor in India should get medicines at affordable rates.
After reporting an operating loss in 1997 the company was reported to the Bureau of Industrial and Financial Restructuring (BIFR). On 17 January 2009 the company was taken off the books of the BIFR after reporting a record turnover of ₹ 120 crore (US$24 million).
Operations
Although the company's primary objective was to develop drugs for the health-care industry, the company has now diversified into the agricultural and veterinary areas as well. The manufacturing plant located in Pimpri has facilities to produce bulk drugs (capacity 60 MMU annually) as well as formulations in various dosage forms – injectables (132 million vials), capsules (250 million), tablets (120 million), large volume parentrals[clarification needed] (12 million bottles annually), liquid orals, etc.
In-house developed products
Health care
Hamycin (own research product)
Ampicillin Sodium
Benzyl Penicillin Potassium
Benzyl Penicillin Sodium
Benzathine Penicillin (Longacillin)
Cefuroxime Sodium
Amoxycillin Trihydrate (Delamin)
Cefotaxime Sodium (Haltax)
Ceftriaxone Sodium (Haxone)
Meropenem (Halpen)
Agricultural and veterinary
Aureofungin (anti-fungal used in preservation of the fruits and vegetables)
Humaur (bio-organic foliar spray)
Streptocycline (antibacterial for effective control of diseases in plants)
Azotomeal
Phosphomeal
References
^[1] Hindustan Antibiotics now out of ICU: 18 January 2009 Archived 20 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine