ARTICLE
27 April 2026

OECD Blog Item Explores Why Biotech Start-Ups Lag In Europe

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Bergeson & Campbell

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Bergeson & Campbell, P.C. is a Washington D.C. law firm focusing on chemical product approval and regulation, product defense, and associated business issues. The Acta Group, B&C's scientific and regulatory consulting affiliate provides strategic, comprehensive support for global chemical registration, regulation, and sustained compliance. Together, we help companies that make and use chemicals commercialize their products, maintain compliance, and gain competitive advantage as they market their products globally.
On April 27, 2026, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) published a blog item entitled “Biotech start-ups in Europe: Why does the EU lag behind competitors...
United States Food, Drugs, Healthcare, Life Sciences

On April 27, 2026, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) published a blog item entitled “Biotech start-ups in Europe: Why does the EU lag behind competitors and what can policymakers do about it? ” According to the item, evidence shows that Europe still lags competitors in biotech start-up creation, patenting, and venture capital funding. OECD’s blog item “unpacks the gap and explores how agile regulation and smarter financing tools” can help European Union (EU) policymakers build a more competitive biotechnology start-up ecosystem. As reported in our December 18, 2025, blog item, on December 15, 2025, the European Commission (EC) announceda legislative package that includes a proposal for a regulation to establish measures to strengthen the EU’s biotechnology and biomanufacturing sectors (Biotech Act). OECD notes that the Biotech Act appears to address several of the barriers, including “introduc[ing] regulatory sandboxes to allow controlled experimentation with novel technologies, expand[ing] pre-submission consultations to help innovators navigate regulatory submission processes, creat[ing] a strategic project designation to fast-track funding and regulatory clearance, and establish[ing] a €10 billion Health Biotechnology Investment Pilot with the European Investment Bank to mobilise private capital through risk-sharing instruments.” The blog item concludes that the long-term impact of these measures will depend on whether regulation becomes more agile in practice and whether financing instruments reach biotech start-ups at the costly stages of demonstration and scale-up. OECD states that “[c]losing the gap in biotechnology start-up creation, venture capital investment and patenting will require measures designed with start-ups explicitly in mind: faster, simpler and more accessible pathways that turn Europe’s research excellence into commercial activity.”

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