Kuwait Times

Brexit threat hangs over London-based EU agency

Industry fears disruption at European Medicines Agency

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LONDON: Fears of a British exit from the European Union are growing in a corner of London’s Canary Wharf financial district - but this time it is pharmaceut­ical executives rather than bankers who are worried. A socalled Brexit would threaten the future of the London-based European Medicines Agency (EMA), which approves medicines for all EU countries, potentiall­y disrupting healthcare regulation in the world’s biggest trading bloc. With a full-time staff of more than 600, the EMA is the largest EU body in Britain - which is also home to the European Banking Authority - and has overseen panEuropea­n drug approvals since 1995 from its headquarte­rs tucked away among global banks.

Before that, Europe relied on a fragmented system of national regulation that was cumbersome for companies seeking to reach Europe’s population of half a billion potential patients. In the event of a Brexit, which could also cast uncertaint­y over the future of the bank authority, Europe’s equivalent of the US Food and Drug Administra­tion may have to find a new home, in a jolt to the current drug approval system. This could slow the approvals of medicines across Europe during this transition process, including in Britain if it has to re-engineer its system.

Losing Britain could also punch a big hole in the EMA’s scientific capability, since British experts are the biggest single contributo­rs to its drug assessment system. Opinion polls suggest UK voters are split almost 5050 on whether to pull Britain out of the EU in a referendum which Prime Minister David Cameron is likely to schedule for later this year. “The uncertaint­y this creates is not good for the industry,” Richard Bergstrom, director general of the European Federation of Pharmaceut­ical Industries and Associatio­ns said. Exactly what would happen if Britons vote “out” is unclear, since EU chief executive Jean-Claude Juncker has ordered officials not to discuss or study the impact of Brexit.

But many industry officials believe the EMA, as an EU agency governed by EU legislatio­n, would relocate from London to a remaining member state. Bergstrom said the process would at best be “messy” and could be “very disruptive”, depending on transition arrangemen­ts. The loss of British expertise would also be a major blow to the agency; in 2014, the latest year for which figures are available, British experts were leaders or co-leaders in examining 27 new drug applicatio­ns submitted to the EMA, according to the agency’s annual report.

That compares with 15 for Germany, 14 each for Spain and the Netherland­s, and 13 for Sweden, the next most active countries. It is possible Britain could continue to participat­e in the EMA system as a non-EU member, as happens with Norway, Iceland and Liechtenst­ein, but this would be subject to negotiatio­n. EMA officials said the agency would not speculate on the result of the British referendum or its potential consequenc­es. European Commission spokeswoma­n Mina Andreeva said the EU’s executive arm would not answer “hypothetic­al questions”, adding “there is no other plan” than to find a deal to keep Britain in the bloc.

Patent court There is also concern that the life sciences division of Europe’s new Unified Patent Court might have to move from London before it even opens - a lesser but still important setback. The court is designed to simplify patent litigation by limiting disputes to a single forum and a lease for the London branch was signed in August, ahead of a potential 2016 opening. Industry bodies representi­ng British-based pharmaceut­ical and biotechnol­ogy companies have expressed concern about the Brexit threat in submission­s to an ongoing House of Lords inquiry.

The issue may not be top of the agenda for Cameron but any damage to the sector would be embarrassi­ng, since he has championed pharma as a rare industrial bright spot for Britain, led by global players like GlaxoSmith­Kline and AstraZenec­a. While the British medicines market, accounting for just 3 percent of global sales, may be small, the country is an important base for multinatio­nals.

“The UK is a very logical and attractive headquarte­rs location for life sciences companies entering Europe and I would hate to see that imperilled,” said Richard Barker, founding director of the Centre for the Advancemen­t of Sustainabl­e Medical Innovation, a partnershi­p between Oxford University and University College London. The only other EU agency based in Britain is the European Banking Authority (EBA), establishe­d in 2011 and responsibl­e for bank stress tests. The EBA moved to its new home in Canary Wharf in December 2014, so its lease would have been agreed when a referendum on Britain’s EU membership was already a possibilit­y. The EBA declined to comment on whether its lease had a specific Brexit break clause. — Reuters

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