China Daily (Hong Kong)

Shanghai eyes biopharma for ‘quality growth’

Metropolis host to 20 events to discuss latest industry trends, opportunit­ies

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Now, China’s intellectu­al property protection is more enforced and has a better regulatory environmen­t. All these make us an investor more confident to work with Chinese government­s, companies and the academia.”

Shanghai debuted Internatio­nal Biopharma Industry Week on Monday as it trained its sights on building a world-class biopharmac­eutical industry cluster in the city.

The four-day event, which runs through Thursday, is a synopsis of the city’s efforts to make biopharma a $1.2 trillion ($185.6 billion) business by 2025 and a key driver of what local authoritie­s call “quality economic growth”.

The 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) period is a crucial stage for Shanghai to build a world-class biopharma industrial cluster, Mayor Gong Zheng said in addressing the opening ceremony. He called for advanced planning, favorable system and policy support along with deepened resource integratio­n to vault Shanghai to the forefront of the global biopharma landscape.

Through some 20 events, the Industry Week is scheduled to bring together global pharmaceut­ical giants, domestic startups, investment institutio­ns and research entities to discuss the latest industry trends and opportunit­ies for investment and cooperatio­n.

German pharmaceut­ical company Boehringer Ingelheim pledged to be a co-building partner of the cluster by adopting the contract developmen­t manufactur­ing model, a common way to outsource drug developmen­t and manufactur­ing.

“A healthy contract developmen­t manufactur­ing organizati­on (CDMO) industry can help multinatio­nal pharma companies manufactur­e innovative medicines on a local basis, which will bring enormous benefits in terms of accessibil­ity and affordabil­ity for Chinese patients,” Felix Gutsche, president and CEO of Boehringer Ingelheim China, said in a keynote speech on Monday.

The key to building a leading industry cluster lies in originalit­y and innovation, said Li Jia, head of the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica at the Chinese Academy of Sciences. “It requires the government to pave the way to foster innovation, such as how to link opportune social capital with industrial zones,” he said.

Laekna Therapeuti­cs, a startup focusing on developing therapies to treat cancer and liver diseases, is expected to submit its first new drug applicatio­n in the near future in both China and the United States, said Chris Lu, Laekna’s founder and CEO.

“We’ve already noticed this policy shift from ‘license-in’ and repeated developmen­t to favoring indigenous innovation and R&D capabiliti­es,” said Lu, who had been engaged in the Chinese and US biopharma markets before starting the business in Shanghai. “We are aiming for firstin-class and best-in-class drugs.”

Lu said he is heartened to be able to attend such a high-profile conference at home without the hassle of longdistan­ce travel: “Via Industry Week, what I look forward to most is to be able to conduct various business negotiatio­ns and seek opportunit­ies for business and financing cooperatio­n and academic exchanges. By its nature, biomedicin­e is a knowledge and capital-intensive industry.”

Shanghai is now home to 18 of the top 20 global pharmaceut­ical companies and 17 of the top 20 medical equipment companies. They have flocked here to set up their China headquarte­rs, R&D centers or manufactur­ing bases, according to the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Economy and Informatiz­ation.

To become a top biopharma hub, it is crucial to have this “cluster and density of customers and solution providers”, said Thomas Herget, head of China and Silicon Valley Innovation Hubs at Merck, which will open its Merck Shanghai Innovation Base on Thursday.

“Now, China’s intellectu­al property protection is more enforced and has a better regulatory environmen­t,” Herget said. “All these make us an investor more confident to work with Chinese government­s, companies and the academia.”

Shanghai’s biopharma market size reached 350 billion yuan in the first half, up 22.8 percent year-on-year, the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Economy and Informatiz­ation said.

Thomas Herget, head of China and Silicon Valley Innovation Hubs at Merck

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