April 16, 2024

Erichoffer

Savvy business masters

Bali’s miracle: Turning wine into hand sanitiser

BALI: Pharmacists on the Indonesian holiday island of Bali are tackling a shortage of anti-coronavirus hand sanitiser by making their own unique, tropical version – from thousands of litres of fermented palm wine.

The idea was the brainchild of Bali police chief Petrus Reinhard Golose, who says he was alarmed that supplies of alcohol-based disinfectant were in short supply while prices soared for what was left on the market.

READ: COVID-19: Jakarta’s low-wage workers hard hit by layoffs, forced unpaid leave

He rustled up some 4,000 litres of the popular, potent beverage – known as arak – by asking local manufacturers to donate from their stocks, with the force also dipping into its own funds to buy up extra supplies.

Staff at Bali’s Udayana University were then tasked with turning the wine into a handwash that could protect against the coronavirus.

Within a week, they had managed to produce a disinfectant with a 96 per cent alcohol content to meet World Health Organization standards, according to the university.

Some clove and mint oil were added to the mixture to reduce hand irritation.

READ: Jakarta coffin maker faces gruelling days as coronavirus death toll climbs

“So far we’ve produced 10,600 bottles of hand sanitiser using arak and Bali police have given them out to people in need,” Dewa Ayu Swastini, head of the university’s pharmaceutical faculty, told AFP on Wednesday.

Bali has reported 49 confirmed cases of the coronavirus and 2 deaths.

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