Biotechnology booming in the USA
Biotechnology is one of the economic hopefuls of the current century. Moreover, even for many of the most serious diseases, the only hope for health lies in biotechnological solutions. Even though America is ahead of us by a nose, we don’t have to hide. In some regions in Germany, and especially in Bavaria, there is a biotech industry that is already 20 years old and that does not need to fear comparison with other biotech regions in the world in terms of its scientific basis.
The start-up companies at the IZB and, of course, the entire industry are working flat out on solutions that the world is waiting for. Sheaths for breast implants made of naturally produced spider silk, which no longer cause rejection reactions. Devices that can identify the dreaded resistant germs in a time horizon as short as 8 minutes. Or antibodies from alpacas, which scientists can use to conduct research in half the time in any lab in the world. And let’s not forget the fight against diseases such as Parkinson’s or Alzheimer’s, which are being researched by the best scientists in the world.
The bottleneck is funding for biotech companies. In the United States, this is much easier to obtain and is higher by a factor of 10. IPOs of biotech companies are currently difficult to implement in Europe and the often risk-averse investment behavior of the capital market does not favor the industry either! Without business angels such as the Strüngmann brothers or Dietmar Hopp and a few venture capital companies that invest in biotechnology despite long development times, the industry in Germany would probably no longer exist in its present form.
More incentives would also need to be created in terms of tax policy. Investments in this industry should be much more favored. This is where politics has been called upon for a long time. Fortunately, some of the IZB companies were able to conclude contracts worth around EUR 630 million in 2015 alone. The deal by Baxalta, which acquired the IZB company Suppremol for 200 million euros, was outstanding. In a capital increase on Nasdaq in New York, Pieris AG placed more than 9 million shares as planned in July 2015. This results in net income of $22.7 million. However, the industry needs much more money to reliably grow existing companies with excellent product ideas and also to enable new start-ups. Investments in biotechnology make a lot of sense because, on the one hand, highly interesting returns can be generated. On the other hand, however, the most valuable asset we have, namely our health, can be protected ever more sustainably with new medicines and therapies.
The IZB sits at the center of a science campus unlike any other in the world. Surrounded by two Max Planck Institutes (Biochemistry and Neurobiology) and, among others, the Chairs of Chemistry, Pharmacy and Biology of the elite LMU University as well as the Biomedical Center, the Dementia and Stroke Center, the Systems Biology Institute BioSys M and the Helmholtz Center, approximately 12,000 scientists work on the campus. All facilities can be reached within 10 minutes. Of course, networking also takes place with the more than 60 high-tech companies in the nearby industrial park. These include, for example, the two successful and largest biotech companies such as Morphosys AG or MediGene AG. Many IZB companies cooperate with the renowned Klinikum Großhadern. The Innovation and Start-up Center Biotechnology IZB in Martinsried and Weihenstephan offers start-up companies an enormously creative environment in the field of cutting-edge research, excellent networks and a high-quality building infrastructure.
The IZB houses 63 start-up companies, two restaurants, conference room management also for external companies, two kindergartens or nurseries as well as a chemistry school for TA training. In addition, the IZB built a hotel with 42 rooms for campus guests in 2015 to adequately accommodate national and international visitors to the Martinsried campus. Last but not least, to intensify networking between the entities mentioned above, we have launched the FacultyClub G2B (Gateway to Biotech), which now has over 300 members. With selected events, such as the IZBrunch, the Biotech Press Lounge or the Munich Life Science Pitch Day, we network scientists with biotech companies and venture capital firms. Projects are also planned for the near future that will pay into the Hotspot for Life Sciences infrastructure.
About the IZB
The development company IZB mbH has become one of the top ten biotechnology centers in the world. It was founded in 1995 and is the operating company of the Biotechnology Innovation and Start-up Centers in Planegg-Martinsried and Freising Weihenstephan and . More than 60 biotech companies with more than 650 employees are located on 26,000 m². A key criterion for the success of the IZB is its proximity to the cutting-edge research of Ludwig Maximilian University and the renowned biotechnology research institutions on the Martinsried campus, such as the Max Planck Institutes. The Planegg-Martinsried site now houses start-ups focusing on medical biotechnology on 23,000 m². Since 2002, the IZB in Freising-Weihenstephan has offered optimal conditions for start-ups from the life science sector on 3,000 m².
The next “Life Science Pitch Day” will take place on 24.06.16 in Marinsried:
www.izb-online.de/de/veranstaltungsreader/life-science-pitch-day.html