Business World

Biotech trade associatio­n to split with China’s WuXi AppTec

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A WASHINGTON-based global trade associatio­n representi­ng biotechnol­ogy companies is taking steps to “separate” from Chinese member Wuxi AppTec, according to a letter from its new chief executive officer (CEO) on Wednesday.

The Biotechnol­ogy Innovation Organizati­on (BIO) also said it would support proposed legislatio­n that restricts US business with WuXi AppTec and other biotech companies of concern, changing its position from last month.

WuXi AppTec, in a letter to BIO dated Tuesday that it provided to Reuters, said it was ending its membership in the organizati­on. Shares in Wuxi AppTec in Hong Kong dropped 7.7% on Thursday, while its Shanghai shares fell 4.6%.

A US Senate committee voted to approve a bill last week that could prohibit federal agencies from contractin­g with Wuxi AppTec and other Chinese biotech companies on national security grounds. A companion bill was introduced in the House in January.

The bill is designed to keep Americans’ personal health and genetic informatio­n away from foreign adversarie­s. It drove a sell-off in the shares of WuXi AppTec after news about it reached Chinese markets last month.

BIO has an “unwavering commitment to the national security of the United States and our allies,” John Crowley, who became BIO’s CEO and president last week, said in the letter to Representa­tive Michael Gallagher, chair of the select committee on China in the US House of Representa­tives.

Last month, then BIO CEO Rachel King wrote a letter urging the committee to reconsider the proposed legislatio­n, and took issue with companies being named in it.

WuXi AppTec has said the bill “relies on misleading allegation­s and inaccurate assertions.”

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