LOGOLOGOLOGOLOGO
    • About us
      • What we do
      • Who we are
        • Governance
        • Staff
        • Vacancies
    • Members
      • EuropaBio Members
      • About Membership
    • How we work
      • Healthcare Biotechnology Council
        • Patient BioForum
        • Study – Impact of the EU’s General Pharmaceutical Legislation
      • Industrial Biotechnology Council
        • EFIB
        • Microorganisms
      • National Associations Council
      • SME Platform
      • Biomanufacturing Platform
        • Biotechnology in our Lives
    • Activities
      • 25 Years of Innovation
      • The EU Biotech Act
      • European Biotech Week
      • EU Projects
        • PRIMED Project
        • APROVALS Project
    • News & Events
      • News
      • Events
    • Library
    Become a member
    ✕

    An EU IP Action Plan for strong industrial ecosystems

    25/11/2020
    PRESS RELEASE
    An EU IP Action Plan for strong industrial ecosystem

    Brussels, 25 November 2020 - Today, the European Commission has set out its vision on the role of IP for Europe’s industrial future through the publication of a new IP Action Plan.

    EuropaBio’s Director General, Dr. Claire Skentelbery, stated: “IP underpins the success of life sciences and biotechnology innovation across key industrial ecosystems, including health, low-carbon and agri-food. Biotechnology-derived innovations have been critical in the pandemic response, and none of these would have been possible without a robust IP framework to secure investment in high-risk research, infrastructure, and diversified products. We welcome the Commission IP Action Plan to enable critical IP for EU-based and globally competitive innovation and we call for proactive policy coherence between this Plan and the Industrial and Pharmaceutical Strategies.”

    The EU biotechnology ecosystem is confronted with high costs of patenting, while competing with other high-tech regions, such as the US, Japan, and China. Biotech SMEs are particularly likely to struggle, especially in view of the fragmented EU market. In addition, IP is often critical to attract funding for SMEs to conduct R&D further up the Technology Readiness Level (TRL) scale, often with larger external partners, and to fund the next generation of discoveries. A survey of 190 venture capital-seeking biotech companies showed that having at least one patent application filed reduced the time-period to the first VC investment by 76%.

    Dr. Skentelbery added: “We applaud today’s pledge from the European Commission to swiftly enable the unitary patent system to mitigate the patent cost hurdle. This is vital for biotech SMEs which often operate for many years without revenue or profits. We also stress again the importance of promptly introducing a unitary SPC title, as well as putting in place a single SPC grant mechanism with a suitable appeal structure, and a Single Application Portal to work seamlessly alongside national SPC grants.”

    Over the last months, nearly 75% of the 800 R&D programmes launched for COVID-19 come from small and medium-sized biotechnology companies.

    Dr. Skentelbery continued to comment that: “SMEs using biotechnology have been leading the charge against the COVID-19 pandemic. The IP developed over many years at a significant cost enabled delivery on such a remarkable pace and scale. The ongoing “Incentives Review” must recognise IP as the main driver for innovation and not mis-characterise IP as a barrier to patient access. Compulsory licences are not an option to address challenges with access, whose root causes are multi-factorial and unrelated to IP rights.”

    Digitalisation is a key opportunity for the EU to become a trusted global leader. EuropaBio holds that the EU needs to coordinate with relevant organisations, such as WIPO, to develop specific rules on AI.

    Dr. Skentelbery explained: “The convergence of data and bio-science, facilitated by AI and computing, is revolutionising the potential of life sciences and biotechnology to respond to global challenges. The EU IP framework should further support the application of new technologies, such as AI, digital technologies and blockchain, for life science innovations.”

    EuropaBio looks forward to engaging with the European Commission and all stakeholders in the process of implementation of the EU IP Action Plan for securing and broadening the criticality of IP for a successful life sciences and biotechnology ecosystem in the EU.

    An EU IP Action Plan for strong industrial ecosystems


    Download
    2020_11_G_PR_EuropaBio-Statement-on-the-IP-Action-Plan-1
    Share
    Communications Team
    Communications Team

    Related posts

    29/05/2026

    The Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology joins EuropaBio: Advancing Applied Biotechnology in Europe


    Read more
    26/05/2026

    EuropaBio Position on the Food and Feed SafetyOmnibus (May 2026)


    Read more
    18/05/2026

    Biodefence & Biosecurity in focus for EuropaBio with dedicated Task Force


    Read more

    Important links

    • The Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology joins EuropaBio: Advancing Applied Biotechnology in Europe
    • EuropaBio Position on the Food and Feed SafetyOmnibus (May 2026)

    Categories in our Newsroom

    EBIO-white

    EuropaBio represents corporate and associate members across sectors, plus national and regional biotechnology associations which, in turn, represent over 5000 biotech companies, 4600 out of them are SMEs.

    Contact us

    Extra links

    Members
    Staff
    Privacy policy
    Legal & cookies
    Events
    Newsroom

    Become a member

    Media pack

    © 2026 Europabio. All Rights Reserved. Designed by EYAS
    Become a member

    Vitamin B2

    The biomanufacturing of Vitamin B2 led to the reduction of 75% of fossil raw materials and 50% operating costs, compared to the chemical process. Vitamin B2 is used in the food, feed or healthcare sectors.

    Insulin

    Insulin is one of the most widely known biopharmaceutical. Biotechnology revolutionised its manufacturing process and led to the development of new types of insulin through r-DNA technology.

    Detergents

    Enzymes and biosurfactancts are alternative ingredients that improve the performance of detergents, while leading to water and energy savings and reductions in CO2 emissions and water toxicity.

    Clothes

    Clothes made from alternative fibres produced by microorganisms can be 8x stronger than steel, 100% recyclable, biodegradable and replace fossil-fuel based or resource-intensive textiles.

    Algal Omega 3

    Algal Omega-3 is an innovative feed product for aquaculture. It reduces the impact on climate change by 30-40% compared to fish oil and saves 60 tons of wild fish for every ton of Algal Omega-3 used.

    Cheese

    Cheese is a vegetarian product thanks to biotechnology. Biotechnology is also essential to produce lactose- or cholesterol-free cheese, as well as alternative proteins.