Loveland Reporter-Herald

Agilent breaks ground on $725M expansion

- By Dallas Heltzell

FREDERICK >> Frigid temperatur­es and snow-covered grounds didn’t stop officials from Agilent Technologi­es Inc. (NYSE: A) from breaking ground Thursday on the $725 million, 198,000-square-foot expansion of its oligo manufactur­ing facility in Frederick’s Eagle Business Park.

Agilent, based in Santa Clara, California, expects that the expansion in Frederick will add more than 160 jobs and double its manufactur­ing capacity for therapeuti­c nucleic acids, also called therapeuti­c oligonucle­otides or oligos, which are short DNA and RNA molecules that serve as the active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s for drugs targeting a growing number of ailments, including cancer, cardiovasc­ular disease and rare and infectious diseases.

“This was science fiction when I was a kid just 20 years ago, where that molecule actually becomes the active pharmaceut­ical, the core of the drug we take as humans,” said Sam Raha, president of Agilent’s Diagnostic­s and Genomics Group. “It goes in and mediates what’s happening geneticall­y for us.”

Raha revealed that he has high cholestero­l, and “I’ve been on statins since I was 28. We are now making an active pharmaceut­ical ingredient for a drug which is made for high cholestero­l. It’s going to change the way it’s managed.

Instead of having to take a pill every night, like I do, you’re going to be able to take it once every six months through an injection.”

Raha said the market for synthetic, therapeuti­c oligonucle­otides is estimated at $1 billion and is projected to grow in the double digits annually over the next five years, reaching $2.4 billion when the new facility opens.

The addition of two new manufactur­ing lines will enable Agilent to meet the growing demand, and it expects customer shipments from the expansion to begin in 2026.

“We are now, right here in your city, the global leader for this particular modality of these types

of oligos,” Raha said. “It’s that market growth, the ability to impact human health and our position in the space that has led us to have the conviction to make this additional investment.”

As part of its investment in Frederick, Agilent’s foundation issued a $25,000 grant to Frederick High School’s P-TECH program, which offers mentorship to ninth-grade students the opportunit­y to graduate with an associate’s degree in bioscience from Aims Community College within four to six years, and free of cost.

P-TECH is a global education model that aims to increase workforce readiness — particular­ly among first-generation college, minority, low-income students and those from other under-represente­d communitie­s — and features similar partnershi­ps between local school districts, colleges and industry employers across more than 20 countries.

Agilent’s grant will cover a majority of supplies and equipment for Frederick High participan­ts over the course of the program.

Agilent chose New York City-based Turner Constructi­on to build the facility. Turner also recently won a $4.4 billion project for a Honda electric vehicle battery factory in Ohio and a $1 billion electric-vehicle battery recycling facility project in Kentucky.

Agilent’s full range of solutions includes instrument­s, software, services and expertise.

It generated revenue of $6.85 billion in fiscal 2022 and employs 18,000 people worldwide.

Paying tribute to the support the project has gotten from officials at the town, county and the state Office of Economic Developmen­t

and Internatio­nal Trade, Gov. Jarred Polis called the groundbrea­king “a big day, not just for Frederick, for Weld County and Colorado, but potentiall­y for every one of us across the world who can benefit from these life-saving technologi­es.

“It could be your mother, your father, your aunt, your uncle,” Polis said. “it could be your son, your daughter. It could be yourself.”

Frederick Mayor Tracie Crites called the partnershi­p “a commitment to our quality of life in Frederick, to our desire to write our own destiny as a town.

“The better the soil, the bigger the harvest,” she told the Agilent officials. “Frederick is honored to be your soil, literally, and we’re committed to supporting your rich harvest.”

 ?? COURTESY — AGILENT TECHNOLOGI­ES INC. ?? “The expansion project is anticipate­d to add 310,000square feet of manufactur­ing building, 61,000square feet of associated office uses, 42,000square feet of warehouse/ central utility plant, 2,000square feet of drum storage expansion and 10,000square feet of tank farm,” Frederick planning documents show.
COURTESY — AGILENT TECHNOLOGI­ES INC. “The expansion project is anticipate­d to add 310,000square feet of manufactur­ing building, 61,000square feet of associated office uses, 42,000square feet of warehouse/ central utility plant, 2,000square feet of drum storage expansion and 10,000square feet of tank farm,” Frederick planning documents show.

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