Cape Times

Ballot over location of medical agency after Brexit

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BRUSSELS: It may be a cross between the Eurovision Song Contest, a papal conclave and a social club raffle but a ballot among EU ministers today could hurt Europe’s pharmaceut­ical industry and the health of millions.

It will fix the new home of the European Medicines Agency (EMA), which must leave London by 2019 when Britain leaves the EU; most of its 900 staff may refuse to move to many of the 19 cities in the running, the EMA warns. Replacing them would delay drug approvals and patient safety checks.

Yet the result, diplomats agree, is utterly unpredicta­ble; months of horse-trading on issues unrelated to healthcare will end up in hours of haggling between secret ballots in Brussels tonight. It could even come down to drawing lots.

“Nobody really knows what is going to happen,” one diplomat said. “They will be locked in there for hours… you can try to secure some backing but it’s a secret ballot and you have no way of checking whether what you agreed was honoured.”

The fate of the 160-strong London-based European Banking Authority (EBA) will also be decided at the meeting of EU affairs ministers from the other 27 member states. But it is the promise of spin-off jobs and travel billions for the city that the EMA will transform into a hub for Europe’s medical industry which is firing up intense national bidding rivalries.

The extent of the field is, in the memory of EU officials, probably unpreceden­ted. Early talk of the EU executive winnowing down a short list on the basis of “objective” criteria went unheeded as government­s have waded in for a share of the spoils.

Milan, Amsterdam and Barcelona campaigned hard. But there is a push from eastern states, whose tardy membership means they host fewer offices. Slovak capital Bratislava is a contender even though an EMA survey of its staff found most of them might quit if posted to the bloc’s poor eastern regions.

A first ballot, to start from about 5pm (SA time), will see ministers rank their top three choices. Unless a majority makes the same first choice there will be a second vote among the top picks then a third-round run-off. If it is still tied, the Estonian meeting chairman will simply draw lots.

The six countries not bidding for either agency have been courted assiduousl­y and may seek favours elsewhere. Luxembourg and the Czech Republic are not bidding for the EMA but want others’ votes in their bids for the EBA. Whoever wins the EMA must then drop out of the running for the Banking Authority.

British bookmaker Ladbrokes has Milan the 2-1 favourite to secure the EMA, with Bratislava on 3-1 and Amsterdam 7-1.

For the EBA, Frankfurt leads at 6-4 followed by Vienna and Dublin.– Reuters

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