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
    ✕

    ‘Consistency, cooperation and practicality are the watch words’. EuropaBio reacts to provisional agreement on the Critical Medicines Act

    12/05/2026

    Brussels, 12 May 2026 

    “2026 is a defining moment for Europe’s healthcare framework, with two major legislative reforms set to reshape the regulatory landscape. As implementation moves forward, it is critical that these reforms strengthen — not weaken — Europe’s health biotech sector, which is already under significant global competitive pressure and facing increasing cost-containment dynamics that risk limiting patient access to innovation.

    The Critical Medicines Act must remain focused on its core objective: addressing shortages and reinforcing supply security. It should not become an instrument for additional cost-containment measures.”

    Dr Claire Skentelbery, Director General of EuropaBio.

    EuropaBio, the association representing Europe’s innovative bioindustries, takes note of the provisional agreement reached by co-legislators on the Critical Medicines Act (CMA).

    Together with the forthcoming reform of the EU General Pharmaceutical Legislation, the CMA marks a significant shift in the European regulatory and access landscape at a critical time for the health biotech sector.

    Whilst the primary objective of the CMA is to address shortages of critical medicines, EuropaBio will continue to monitor the developments closely and engage constructively with co-legislators and stakeholders to ensure that the final provisions and their implementation deliver on the core ambitions of the Act: strengthening supply chains and improving Europe’s capacity to anticipate and mitigate shortages.

    EuropaBio calls for clear and consistent guidance on the application of the ‘Medicinal Products of Common Interest’ concept across the EU. It is essential this this tool complements – rather than circumvents – established access pathways, ensuring predictability for patients and innovators alike.

    Public procurement provisions will be central to achieving more resilient supply systems. EuropaBio welcomes the introduction of a multi-winner approach, which can support diversifying supply chains and reduce risk linked to single supply. At the same time, close cooperation between public authorities and industry will be crucial to ensure that resilience requirements are practical, effective and aligned with how supply chains operate globally.

    While recognising policymakers’ efforts to strengthen European manufacturing capacity, EuropaBio reiterates that biopharmaceutical supply chains are inherently global. Building new biomanufacturing capabilities require long-term planning, sustained investment and supportive regulatory framework.

    EuropaBio cautiously welcomes provisions enabling Member States to share information and improve coordination on contingency stock requirements. A harmonised approach is essential to avoid unintended market distortion and minimise shortages. Engagement with key supply chain actors will be critical for the implementation of this provision.

    EuropaBio underlines that joint procurement mechanisms must remain voluntary, ensuring flexibility for Member States while supporting cooperation where it adds value and taking into account the specificities of medicines, their delivery mechanism and how they fit into patient care pathways.

    EuropaBio looks forward to further detail on the agreement and remains committed to maintaining a constructive dialogue with policymakers throughout the final legislative and implementation process.

    ‘Consistency, cooperation and practicality are the watch words’. EuropaBio reacts to provisional agreement on the Critical Medicines Act


    Download

    Share
    Communications Team
    Communications Team

    Related posts

    04/06/2026

    Bio-based and Biodegradable Industries Association (BBIA) joins EuropaBio: Supporting the bio-based economy


    Read more
    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

    Important links

    • Bio-based and Biodegradable Industries Association (BBIA) joins EuropaBio: Supporting the bio-based economy
    • The Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology joins EuropaBio: Advancing Applied Biotechnology in Europe

    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.