Conexiant
Login
  • The Analytical Scientist
  • The Cannabis Scientist
  • The Medicine Maker
  • The Ophthalmologist
  • The Pathologist
  • The Traditional Scientist
The Medicine Maker
  • Explore

    Explore

    • Latest
    • Features
    • Interviews
    • Business & Trends
    • Technology & Manufacturing
    • Product Profiles
    • White Papers

    Featured Topics

    • Biopharma
    • Small Molecules
    • Cell & Gene
    • Future of Pharma

    Issues

    • Latest Issue
    • Archive
    • Cell and Gene Therapy Supplement
  • Topics

    Topics

    • Drug Discovery
    • Development & Clinical
    • Formulation
    • Drug Delivery
    • Bioprocessing
    • Small Molecules
    • Cell and Gene
    • Facilities & Equipment
    • Outsourcing
    • Packaging
    • Supply Chain
    • Regulation & Standards
  • News & Blogs

    News & Blogs

    • Industry News
    • Research News
    • Blogs
  • Events
    • Live Events
    • Webinars
  • Community & Awards

    Community & Awards

    • Power List
    • Sitting Down With
    • Innovation Awards
    • Company of the Year Awards
    • Authors & Contributors
  • Multimedia
    • Video
    • Podcasts
    • eBooks
Subscribe
Subscribe
The Medicine Maker / Issues / 2018 / Articles / Mar / Will Irish Eyes Keep Smiling?
Business & Regulation Business Practice Trends & Forecasts

Will Irish Eyes Keep Smiling?

“Brexit and Trump” were the talk of Dublin town at the 2018 Biopharma Ambition conference

By James Strachan 03/14/2018 1 min read

Share

Delegates from the international biopharma industry gathered just a stone’s throw away from Dublin Castle’s medieval Record Tower for the Biopharma Ambition conference in February. The biopharma industry is hugely important for Ireland’s economy, making up a remarkable 55 percent of Irish goods exports – €67.8 billion in 2017. Delegates at the conference were told that each of the world’s top 10 biopharma companies have a presence in Ireland, and that the island was the sixth largest medicinal and pharmaceutical manufacturing hub in the world in 2017.

Nevertheless, Mary Dickens, President of the Irish Pharmaceutical Healthcare Association and Country Chair & General Manager of General Medicines at Sanofi Ireland, warned against complacency in her welcome address. “The wider environment is not without challenge,” she said, referring to a recent government commissioned study highlighting the vulnerability of Irish biopharma to a “hard Brexit,” as well as to the Trump administration’s recent tax cuts. Writing for the Irish Examiner, John Whelan, consultant on Irish and international trade – who attended the conference – pointed out that some pharma manufacturers will “find it imperative” to shift plants from Ireland to the UK, given the €4.8 billion of pharmaceuticals that Ireland exports to the UK (1). However, Martin Shanahan, CEO of IDA Ireland, was more optimistic, saying that he’s seen a “huge amount of interest” in companies looking to invest in Ireland given potential post-Brexit regulatory challenges. If divergent regulations lead to non-tariff barriers to trade between the UK and the EU (including Ireland), Ireland may look like an attractive proposition for pharma manufacturers looking to sell into the wider European market. The question is, would new investment compensate for the reduced access to the UK market? And is Ireland’s proposition still as attractive for biopharma companies given the changing international tax environment?

Tommy Fanning, Head of Biopharmaceuticals at the IDA, thinks so. “Brexit can yield opportunities for Irish life sciences,” he says “We’re already seeing some sub-supply services companies beginning to look at Ireland.” A number of supply chains are set up so that products are manufactured in Ireland but the final pack and QP release into the European market is done in the UK. “Now the large pharma companies are saying to their partners, ‘we need you to have a base in the EU.’ And given that Ireland has a large manufacturing base already, it makes sense logistically to put that in Ireland too,” he says. “Even the packagers are beginning to put jobs into Ireland – and we had not been talking to packagers for a number of years.” On the subject of US tax cuts, Fanning thinks the jury is out. “Although the big companies in the US are saying they’re going to invest their extra cash in the US, they’ll also invest some of that cash in their international operations. So I think there’s two sides to that picture,” he says. Fanning believes that the secret to Ireland’s success in the biopharma space isn’t just the attractive tax environment. The main factor, he says, is education. The second is the regulatory environment. “You often read about FDA and EMA warning letters for plants – the plants in Ireland do not get those,” he says. “This means companies are confident that their products will be manufactured and delivered on time. “Everyone talks about tax in an Irish context, but it’s the icing on the cake. Unless you have the infrastructure, the skills, and the regulatory environment, no company will come.”

Newsletters

Receive the latest analytical science news, personalities, education, and career development – weekly to your inbox.

Newsletter Signup Image

References

  1. Irish Examiner, “Pharmaceuticals unlikely to avoid a harsh Brexit”, (2018). Available at: http://bit.ly/2sWiKZ8. Accessed 9 March, 2018.

About the Author(s)

James Strachan

Over the course of my Biomedical Sciences degree it dawned on me that my goal of becoming a scientist didn’t quite mesh with my lack of affinity for lab work. Thinking on my decision to pursue biology rather than English at age 15 – despite an aptitude for the latter – I realized that science writing was a way to combine what I loved with what I was good at. From there I set out to gather as much freelancing experience as I could, spending 2 years developing scientific content for International Innovation, before completing an MSc in Science Communication. After gaining invaluable experience in supporting the communications efforts of CERN and IN-PART, I joined Texere – where I am focused on producing consistently engaging, cutting-edge and innovative content for our specialist audiences around the world.

More Articles by James Strachan

False

Advertisement

Recommended

False

Related Content

What Trump’s Latest Moves Mean for the Industry
Business Practice Standards & Regulation Trends & Forecasts Bioprocessing - Upstream & Downstream
What Trump’s Latest Moves Mean for the Industry

May 27, 2025

6 min read

Audrey Greenberg’s latest insight on US-based manufacturing, Trump’s “Administration for A Healthy America”, and an ever-shifting regulatory environment.

Big Bad Pharma?
Business Practice Trends & Forecasts
Big Bad Pharma?

December 1, 2014

0 min read

The Ebola media frenzy has reminded the public how selfish our industry is. But, somehow, that doesn’t sound quite right...

Access All Areas
Business Practice Trends & Forecasts
Access All Areas

December 1, 2014

0 min read

The 2014 Access to Medicine index shows progress – but companies remain “conservative”

Care to ‘Patent Dance’?
Business Practice Trends & Forecasts
Care to ‘Patent Dance’?

December 1, 2014

0 min read

Amgen accuses Sandoz of snubbing its advances in a complex biosimilar dispute

The Medicine Maker
Subscribe

About

  • About Us
  • Work at Conexiant Europe
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2025 Texere Publishing Limited (trading as Conexiant), with registered number 08113419 whose registered office is at Booths No. 1, Booths Park, Chelford Road, Knutsford, England, WA16 8GS.