A Brave New World: Survival Strategies of Custom Manufacturers
24 February 2003 00:00 [Source: ICB Americas]
Custom manufacturers are weathering the downturn in pharmaceutical
outsourcing by taking a cautious, yet forward, approach to
maintaining and building their businesses. Adding small-scale
development laboratories, strengthening technology positions and
further building customer relationships are common strategies being
taken by the top players. And for those companies with
biopharmaceutical manufacturing capacity, expanding capabilities
and capacity to meet increased demand remains a positive
development.
Biotech Provides
Bright Spot
In Tough Market
The two key factors affecting the custom manufacturing
market-the downturn in pharmaceutical outsourcing and increased
demand for contract biopharmaceutical manufacturing-is best seen in
one of the industry leaders, Lonza. Although Lonza's sales for its
exclusive synthesis and biotechnology business increased to SFr 978
million ($718.6 million) in 2002, a 9.8 percent gain over 2001, the
increase was the net result of strong growth in biotechnology
combined with a downturn in its exclusive synthesis business. Its
operation has been affected by production overcapacities at the
pharmaceutical companies and the declining number of approvals for
new products. That led to a restructuring last year, including the
closure of a production facility in Los Angeles and the shifting of
production from that site to its two remaining facilities in
Conshohocken, Pa., and Visp, Switzerland. These two sites account
for 85 percent of the current reactor capacity of Lonza's exclusive
synthesis activities. With the restructuring, Lonza has nearly
finished eliminating roughly 220 positions.
"We are confident that the exclusive synthesis business bottomed
out in 2002 and will make a substantial recovery in 2003," says
Markus Gemuend, chief executive of Lonza. "Our expectations are
based on positive impulses from the strengthened R&D pipeline,
the successful efforts to widen the customer base and savings from
the restructuring measures adopted in 2002."
Lonza Biologics, the contract biopharmaceutical arm of Lonza,
continues to see good growth from new projects, and the company is
investing accordingly. Last month, Lonza Biologics and MorphoSys AG
signed an agreement for access to Lonza's process development and
manufacturing capacity for future antibody projects for both
MorphoSys' own and partnered therapeutic antibody projects.
MorphoSys plans to partner its current proprietary therapeutic
antibody projects before entering clinical trials. MorphoSys will
offer its partners manufacturing capacities at Lonza, thereby
increasing the value of its pre-clinical deals. MorphoSys has
proprietary technology for producing synthetic antibodies.
Lonza Biologics announced last month a large-scale supply
agreement for the long-term commercial manufacturer of the C5
complement inhibitor antibody eculizumab, which is being developed
by Alexion Pharmaceuticals. The drug is now in clinical trials.
Lonza is investing SFr 550 million for four projects. The first
is the SFr 100 million expansion of its Kourim-based microbial
fermentation capacity. Existing fermentation capacity will be
increased by 50 percent, via the installation of two 75 cubic meter
fermenters. The cGMP plant is scheduled to come on stream at the
beginning of 2005.
Lonza has also committed SFr 100 million for a new cGMP
microbial manufacturing facility for biopharmaceuticals in Visp,
with commercial operations expected to begin in the first quarter
of 2005. The company is also investing SFr 20 million for a
small-scale production plant in Visp, which is expected to come on
stream early this year. And SFr 330 million is being spent for the
large-scale build out of Lonza Biologics' mammalian cell culture
production in Portsmouth, N.H., which will add 60,000 liters of
capacity, pushing the current 19,400 liters to almost 80,000
liters. Lonza is upgrading its Slough, UK, capacity to a center of
excellence for development and small scale manufacture, having
recently entered into a manufacturing supply agreement with Abgenix
Inc. under which Abgenix has exclusive access to its Slough site
for five years.
Avecia is another company positioning itself in both biotech and
pharmaceuticals. "In both sectors, this calls for clear
differentiation with an ability to combine the right technologies
and capacities at each scale-early, pilot and late phase," says
Peter Jackson, vice president for pharmaceutical products with
Avecia. "We see a balanced portfolio in biotech/ pharma and across
the clinical development pipeline as helping to counteract the
current challenges in late-phase small molecules, and our biotech
businesses-notably biologics and DNA medicines-are developing
strongly," says Mr. Jackson. The company says it will pursue a
combination of organic growth, bolt-on acquisitions and technology
alliances. In line with a strategy of broadening its pharma
technologies portfolio, Avecia will be announcing the acquisition
of a range of chiral chemistries from Synthon Chiragenics during
Informex this week.
Last year Avecia opened its roughly $3 million Early Phase
Delivery Team (EPDT) plant at Huddersfield, UK. This facility is
fully dedicated to fast conversion of customers' development
processes into clinical trials quantities of pharma intermediates
and actives. The order book is ahead of expectations, and expansion
is likely to be announced later this year.
Avecia also recently completed a $2 million cytotoxics
development suite at its Grangemouth, UK, facility, which will be
officially open shortly. Further investment, planned to be on line
in the fourth quarter 2003, will deliver additional cGMP
hydrogenation capacity at Huddersfield in support of new product
introductions. Meanwhile, construction is on schedule for Avecia
Biotech-nology's Large Scale Advanced Bio-logics Center in
Billingham, UK. The project is Avecia's largest single investment
to date, with phase one capability due on stream in the second half
of this year. Completion is scheduled for 2005. Avecia is also
looking at further expansion for its DNA medicines manufacturing
facility in Milford, Mass.
Building a technology platform that can serve both
pharmaceutical and biotech companies is also a strategy for
Cambrex. "Our goal is to be perceived as a life science company
providing pharmaceutical fine chemicals and services and not a fine
chemicals company providing pharmaceutical fine chemicals," notes
Monika Lekander, president of Cambrex's pharma business unit. The
pharma business unit of Cambrex is focused on building existing
strong relationships with large, medium and emerging pharma
companies, and the biopharmaceutical business unit of Cambrex
focuses on pre-clinical and clinical trials while supporting its
customer's transition to commercial production.
Last year, the biopharmaceutical business unit of Cambrex
launched new, integrated bioprocessing services for biologics in
early-stage development by offering process development and
scale-up expertise in the production of active pharmaceutical
ingredients (API) for pre-clinical studies. The service offerings
include cell line improvements, assay development, media
optimization and upstream/downstream process optimization for
mammalian cell culture, bacterial- and yeast-based
expression/production systems. Cam-brex is constructing a pilot
plant dedicated to these services at its facility in Baltimore, Md.
In addition to the pilot plant, it is doubling capacity in
Baltimore to roughly 6,300 liters. Cambrex is also adding 3,000
liters of fermentation capacity to its existing facility in
Hopkinton, Mass.
To support the supply of clinical trials and smaller scale
active pharmaceutical ingredients, the pharmaceutical business unit
of Cambrex upgraded research, development and quality control
laboratories and added a new custom manufacturing production line
in Europe and a new small-scale active pharmaceutical ingredient
manufacturing facility in the US. Cambrex plans to further
emphasize support services for process development and the
manufacture of clinical trial material such as safety studies,
stability testing, impurities profiles, and early pre-clinical lab
scale development services. The company continues to invest in its
controlled substances business and high containment product
manufacturing. It is also interested in forming technology
collaborations with smaller, innovative companies with proprietary
technologies.
DSM is reasserting itself in the marketplace with a new
organization for its fine chemicals and custom manufacturing
activities. Last year DSM split its fine chemicals business into
two parts-DSM Pharmaceutical Products (DPP), which focuses on
custom manufacturing pharmaceuticals, and DSM Fine Chemicals, which
focuses on the custom as well as multi-client specialty chemicals
for other market segments such as agrochemicals and food
ingredients.
DPP consists of DSM Pharma Chemicals, DSM Biologics and DSM
Pharmaceuticals Inc. DSM Pharma Chemicals is dedicated to the
development and manufacturing of custom chemical advanced
intermediates and APIs. It includes multi-purpose plants in Venlo,
the Netherlands; Linz, Austria; Greenville, N.C.; and South Haven,
Mich. DSM Biologics focuses on biopharmaceutical ingredients and
includes R&D and manufacturing facilities in Montreal, Canada,
and Groningen, the Netherlands. DSM Pharmaceuticals, based in
Greenville, focuses on the development and manufacture of oral,
sterile and topical dosage forms.
Like other companies positioned in both fine chemicals and
biotech, the biotech side of DSM's business has been the most
active. Last December, DSM Biologics and Crucell NV, a Dutch
biotechnology company specializing in technology platforms for
therapeutic proteins, formed an alliance through which DSM gains a
license to Crucell's PER.C6, a cell line that has been developed to
enable efficient biopharmaceutical production.
"The alliance makes it possible to develop and produce
biopharmaceuticals on a large scale," says Feike Sijbesma, member
of the managing board of directors of DSM. "There is a great future
for the type of medicine that we can develop using this technology
platform. That is why an investment in this field is perfectly in
line with our growth strategy for life science products."
DSM is in preparation of the building of 60,000 liters of
fermentation capacity in Montreal, Canada, for large-scale
production of monoclonal antibodies and recombinant proteins based
on mammalian cell cultures. Last September, DSM and the
Houston-based biotechnology Agennix an-nounced the opening of a new
manufacturing facility on DSM's fermentation site in Capua, Italy,
dedicated to the commercial production of pharmaceutical-grade re-
combinant human lactoferrin.
On the pharma side, DSM's $800 million acquisition of Catalytica
Pharmaceuticals in 2001 garnered DSM its sites in Greenville, N.C.,
and South Haven, Mich. Last year, DSM landed approval for the
manufacture of Eli Lilly's Xigris (drotrecogin alfa, activated),
Idec Pharma-ceuticals' Zevalin (ibritumomab tiuxetan) and Shire's
Adderall (amphetamine/dextroamphetamine), and secured a three-year
renewal of its contract with GlaxoSmithKline involving active
pharmaceutical ingredients, dosage form and steriles. At this
point, DSM has a pipeline of over 100 projects in various
development stages, representing roughly $200 million to $300
million in potential revenue. The company recently invested 50
million to expand its GMP fine chemicals production sites at Linz
and Venlo.
Building the Toolbox
The Dow Chemical Company is also pursuing strategies to service
large pharmaceutical, smaller pharmaceutical and biotech companies.
"With the volume of strategic acquisitions we've undertaken over
the last few years, our offering is greatly improved, especially
with the acquisition of Collaborative BioAlliance and the chiral
and fine chemicals business of Ascot," says Nick Hyde, business
director for Dow Pharmaceutical Services. "These recent
acquisitions have built capacity, capabilities and competencies
that Dow can apply to more effectively address customer issues and
grow our relationships and business. Our portfolio can support
large and small pharmaceutical companies as well as small molecule
and biotech companies," he adds.
Dow's Pharmaceutical Services business is part of the company's
custom and fine chemicals global business unit. It combines the
personnel and assets from Dow's original contract manufacturing
services business with those from Chirotech Technology Ltd.,
Mitchell Cotts Chemicals, Hampshire Chemical Corp. and Dow
Biopharma-ceutical Contract Manufacturing Services. It currently
manufactures small molecule active pharmaceutical ingredients,
oligonucleotides, peptides, cGMP polymers and proteins from
microbial fermentation.
Dow Pharmaceutical Services is investing to improve existing
chiral capabilities and to enhance its toolkit. The company is
focused on chiral hydroformylation and is leveraging technology
gained from the Union Carbide acquisition and complementing it with
Dow's knowledge of ligand synthesis and catalysis and Chirotech's
chiral ligand/catalyst capabilities. In December, Dow secured
exclusive rights to DuPont's DuPhos asymmetric hydrogenation
technology. Chirotech originally licensed the exclusive rights for
the commercial use of the DuPhos technology and of related BPE and
ferrocene-based ligands for chemocatalysis.
Dow has also developed technology that permits the isolation of
single enantiomer Dowanals (glycol ethers) and is evaluating the
performance of these materials in various applications. In
collaboration with the Plant Research Institute, Dow is working to
accelerate technology development for production of mammalian-like
glycan structures in transgenic plants.
Degussa has also made recent moves to support
biopharmaceuticals. In November 2002, Degussa's fine chemicals
business unit assumed responsibility for the oligonucleotide
business line of Degussa subsidiary Proligo LLC, headquartered in
Boulder, Colo. The range of products includes RNA and DNA
oligonucleotides as well as aptamers of various lengths and
modifications to be applied in genetic medicines
Like other companies, Degussa is emphasizing technology
solutions. "We are taking a close partnership approach and are also
aggressively extending our services to the agrochemical and
non-life science segments," says Peter Nagler, president of
Degussa's fine chemicals business unit. Through Degussa's Project
House structure, the company is investing in chemocatalysis and
biocatalysis technologies for chemical and process research.
Together with Degussa's Biotechnology Project House, the fine
chemicals unit has successfully started up a new biocatalytic
manufacturing process in its cGMP multi-purpose plant at the
Wolfgang Industrial Park in Frankfurt, Germany. This new
hydantoinase process was used for the first time to produce a
non-natural L-amino acid, a building block for an active
pharmaceutical ingredient for high blood pressure treatment.
Previously this product could only be produced via a complex
chemical route.
Degussa also invested over 4 million ($4.3 million) to
modernize a cGMP multi-purpose plant in the Wolfgang Industrial
Park that manufactures active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) and
intermediates. The plant is suitable for low-temperature syntheses
down to -60ûC. It has a closed system for isolation and
purification of crystalline solids.
In a joint venture with Nanning Only Time Pharmaceuticals Co.
Ltd., Nanning, China, Degussa's fine chemicals business unit is
building a cGMP purification plant that will produce amino acids to
infusion-solution grade. The plant is expected to start up in
mid-2003. In January 2003 the joint venture also began construction
of a new plant for the production of L-methionine at Wuming, China.
The plant will have an annual capacity of about 350 metric tons and
use enzymatic resolution technology.
Other Custom
Players Adjust with
Moves of Their Own
The three Rs-restructuring, reorganization and
rationalization-characterize Clariant's recent activity in its
custom manufacturing business. After successful integration of BTP,
Clariant's life science and electronic chemicals (LSE) division
reorganized around four business units: pharmaceuticals, custom
synthesis, specialty fine chemicals and electronic materials.
Clariant Pharmaceuticals acts as a spearhead for the entire
Clariant organization in working with the pharmaceuticals industry
in chemical manufacturing, small-scale production, process
development, technology development and regulatory support. In its
pharmaceuticals business, Clariant has invested over $40 million on
two cGMP centers of excellence to provide cGMP manufacturing
capacity in both Europe and the US, specifically in small-scale,
cGMP kilo laboratories.
"By realistically matching our capabilities with market
opportunities, we will improve our productivity. We will also
enhance the level of value we offer to our customers, who can be
assured that they have the best asset mix serving the requirements
of their project," says Joachim Mahler, president of the life
sciences and electronic chemicals division of Clariant.
Clariant is therefore closing plants and moving production to
newer, more technologically advanced multi-purpose facilities that
are in the long run less expensive to operate and can do more
complex synthesis at a lower costs. When production cannot be
relocated, it will either be outsourced or the corresponding
business will be sold to a company for which it is a good strategic
fit. Clariant is primarily interested in the most difficult
projects-those requiring a multiple-step synthesis where there is a
technology fit, a reasonable longevity, and an acceptable payoff
based on the required investment, says Mr. Mahler.
Clariant's custom synthesis business unit has added to its core
capabilities. Core reactions include all types of halogenation,
oxidation and reduction processes. Recent additions are substituted
phenylhydrazines, metal organic compounds and carbonylation. The
specialty fine chemicals business unit manufactures and markets
primarily multi-customer products with some derivatives and single
customer products. The product lines of this business unit are
glyoxal and derivatives, silicone organics, diketene/DMS, and
monochloroacetic acid and its derivatives.
Eastman Chemical is also emphasizing technology to maintain a
competitive advantage. "Customers will prefer a company with a
strong technology position," says David Reames, portfolio manager
for Eastman Chemical's chemical synthesis business. "This will
include having a wide array of technical tools and the ability to
employ them in manufacturing. Eastman continues to invest in
research and development to maintain and enhance our technology
position," he says
Eastman provides batch and small-scale continuous custom
manufacturing at sites in Kingsport, Tenn.; Batesville, Ark.;
Longview, Tex.; and Llangefni, Wales. Recent product introductions
and capabilities include epoxybutene, Eastman's BoPhoz chiral
ligands and custom carbonylation. Epoxybutene leads to the
production of chemicals traditionally obtained from Reppe chemistry
(via acetylene and formaldehyde). Discovery and development of a
continuous air oxidation of butadiene now make epoxybutene
production economical. Its BoPhoz ligands,
phosphinoferrocenylaminophosphines used for asymmetric catalysis,
show enantioselectivity for amino acid derivatives by asymmetric
hydrogenation. Eastman's custom carbonylation is now available at a
scale suitable for custom synthesis projects and includes
carbonylation of alcohols, esters, ethers and halides;
hydroformylation of olefins; and hydro- or carboalkoxylation of
olefins. Eastman's custom chemicals business unit has also added
three staff members (two in North America and one in Europe) to
call on trade customers.
International Specialty Products (ISP) has integrated its fine
chemicals business into a core pharmaceutical business so that the
pharmaceutical account managers will be able to build on their
relationships by offering custom manufacturing services in addition
to the company's excipient products. "This arrangement will
increase our coverage of the pharmaceutical market and provide more
exposure for our contract manufacturing business," says Dean Ross,
senior key account manager, pharmaceuticals, fine chemicals.
ISP has also entered into a joint venture with Biocatalytics
that will combine ISP's capabilities in large-scale GMP
manufacturing with Biocatalytics' expertise in enzymatic chemistry
for the production of beta-amino acids used in the synthesis of
beta-peptides, beta-lactam antibiotics and alkaloids. ISP says it
will also continue to build on its controlled substance
capabilities by providing custom manufacturing for niche products
at its Freetown, Mass., location that also has successfully
completed a cGMP inspection by the Food and Drug Administration. In
addition, ISP is expanding its capabilities to produce kilo
quantities of intermediates and final drugs for early phase
testing.
Johnson Matthey's strategy is to develop and deliver
value-creating technologies for the pharmaceutical and fine
chemicals sector, which includes new catalyst development,
participating in academic collaborations and using in-licensing
where appropriate, as well using a single market-oriented team,
notes Martin T. Durnev, vice president and general manager,
chemicals North America and Asia, Johnson Matthey.
A key recent move for Johnson Matthey was the acquisition last
November of Synetix from ICI. "Johnson Matthey and Synetix have a
like-minded approach to doing business. Innovation and technology
underpin our activities and strong customer relationships
characterize our approach," says Larry Pentz, director, chemicals
division, Johnson Matthey. "In bringing together our activities in
the pharma/fine chemicals sector, we are providing our customers
with a much more complete offering."
With the acquisition, the newly combined catalyst businesses
move Johnson Matthey to number two in the global catalyst market
and adds base metal catalysts from Synetix to Johnson Matthey's
platinum group metal catalysts. Last June, Johnson Matthey launched
its Catalytic Services business in the US to provide a range of
services from initial screening of commercial catalysts to the
development of fully scaled-up catalytic processes. Com-plementing
the recent start-up of its Catalytic Services business, Johnson
Matthey has added a major asymmetric catalysis platform to its
offering with Synetix Chiral Technologies (SCT, a part of the
recent Synetix acquisition). SCT opened a $3 million laboratory
facility at its Cambridge Science Park, UK, site last June. This
unit provides the expertise and facilities for the efficient
development synthetic routes to chiral pharma intermediates.
SCT in-licensed a year ago from Professor John Hartwig of Yale
University technology to make chiral amines by hydroamination of
aryl alkenes using a bisphosphine palladium-based catalyst. The
company has spent the last 12 months broadening the application,
and Johnson Matthey plans to announce at Informex this week that
this chemistry can be applied to a range of beta-phenylalanine
derivatives, an increasingly important feature of many
pharmaceutical compounds currently in development. This technology
allows broad access to chiral amines in a single step and it is
cost-efficient, says the company. The relatively inexpensive
starting material, a cinnamate derivative, when coupled with a very
efficient catalytic step, yields a useful chiral amine with
cost-effectiveness.
SCT has also successfully scaled up the alkyne addition
chemistry developed by Professor Erick Carreira from ETH-Zurich,
Switzerland, to produce chiral alcohols. This technology has been
developed by SCT to allow convergent routes to a wide range of
chiral alcohols. It has achieved high stereoselectivity
(entaniomeric excess usually 98 percent plus) with an extensive
range of aldehydes, says the company.
In addition to the two chiral routes cited above, Johnson
Matthey's SCT also has access to these amines and alcohols via the
classic asymmetric hydrogenation of prochiral enamines, imines,
dehydroaminoacids (for amines) or ketones (for alcohols) from
chiral ligands in-licensed from Professor Albert Chan at the Hong
Kong Polytechnic University.
Johnson Matthey has recently made advances in developing novel
palladium precursors for complex coupling reactions, polymer
anchored homogeneous compounds and scavenging fibers for the
removal of residual precious metals in product streams. The company
is now offering in commercial quantities a next-generation coupling
catalyst, palladium (I) tri-tert-butylphosphine bromide dimer,
{Pd(µ-Br)(Pt- Bu3}2 or Pd (I) dimer. It can be used for the
coupling of sterically hindered or electron-rich aryl bromides,
aryl chlorides and heterocycles. The company says it can be easily
handled: as a free flowing, fully formed catalyst, it eliminates
the need for pyrophoric t-Bu3P, and it is comparable to or more
active than Pd (t-Bu3P)2.
Rhodia has identified eight key markets in which it wants to
strengthen its positions, including pharmaceuticals and
agrochemicals. "To serve these markets better, Rhodia has created
Rhodia Pharma Solutions, a pharma-specific enterprise to better
meet the needs of its customers in this important market for a
broad range of products and services, from development services to
bulk active pharmaceutical ingredients, through building block
products and custom manufacturing services," says Jean-Pierre
Clamadieu, president of Rhodia's pharmaceuticals and agrochemicals
division. At the same time, Rhodia has created the Perfumery,
Performance and Agro enterprise, which will allow the company to
serve a larger range of markets for fine chemicals based on a
broader portfolio of technologies and product lines. At Informex,
the company plans to share the details of this new organization.
The company emphasizes its solutions from early drug development to
commercial stage to commercial manufacture as well as a broad
portfolio of technologies, such as fluorination, phosphorylation
and chiral technologies.
Like other companies, Honeywell is putting a new face on its
activities. This fall, Honeywell combined its active pharmaceutical
ingredients unit, its agrochemicals intermediates business and its
research chemicals business to form Honeywell Life Science. The
objective is to capitalize on opportunities for "cross-pollination"
between the customer bases of the units as well as across their
technology platforms. Ultimately, the company hopes to grow
Honeywell Life Science from its $100 million sales mark to around
$500 million within three to five years. Honeywell hopes to build
critical mass. For its current $100 million in sales, active
pharmaceutical ingredients account for roughly 20 percent, research
chemicals 30 percent and non-cGMP pharma and ag fine chemicals the
balance.
Following the formation of the new Bayer to include four
independent operating groups-Bayer Chemicals, Bayer Polymers, Bayer
Cropscience and Bayer Healthcare-the company's fine chemicals and
custom manufacturing activities now fall under Bayer Chemicals'
basic and fine chemicals business group. Like other companies
adding to their toolbox, Bayer commercialized a new chiral
hydrogenation technology using Bayer's proprietary ligand
Cl-Me-O-Biphep [R and
S-5,5'-dichloro-6,6'-dimethoxy-2,2'bis(diphenylphosphino)-1,1'biphenyl]
last fall. Bayer first launched the technology in late 2001 and now
uses this ligand to perform multi-ton enantioselective
hydrogenation. It is also partnered with Strem Chemicals to market
the ligand in research quantities.
In other developments, Bayer started a new cGMP kilo lab in
2002. On the agrochemical side, the company has started the
production of several highly active herbicides in a
state-of-the-art high-containment facility, which includes the
active ingredients for its Bayrepel
[1-(1-methyl-propoxycarbonyl)-2-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperidine], used
in insect repellent products. Bayer has also begun targeting the
non-life science sectors, such as cosmetics, fragrances,
electronics, water treatment and photo applications.
Sigma-Aldrich's fine chemicals activities underwent a major
management change last year with Jai Nagarkatti, former president
of the company's fine chemicals division, becoming the new
president of the company's scientific research division and Franks
Wicks, former president of the company's scientific research
division becoming the new president of its fine chemicals division.
Although its research chemicals are the company's core business, it
does offer custom manufacturing services and products through its
fine chemicals division. Fine chemicals account for roughly 19
percent of the company's total revenues and scientific research 59
percent.
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, - Eastman Chemical Company
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, - Ethylene
, - Ethylene Glycol, Mono
, - Formaldehyde