1 / 31

Signs of Life The Biotech Industry in D.C.

Signs of Life The Biotech Industry in D.C. Heike Mayer & Alan Fogg Assistant Professor Graduate Student Urban Affairs and Planning Master of Urban and Virginia Tech – Alexandria Center Regional Planning. Roadmap. Introduction to Biotech Industry

ryanadan
Download Presentation

Signs of Life The Biotech Industry in D.C.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Signs of LifeThe Biotech Industry in D.C. Heike Mayer & Alan Fogg Assistant Professor Graduate Student Urban Affairs and Planning Master of Urban and Virginia Tech – Alexandria Center Regional Planning

  2. Roadmap • Introduction to Biotech Industry • Key Findings- Nation (Brookings Study 2002)- Regional update • Key Lessons

  3. Why Biotech?  The next Silicon Valley  The battle for the Dot.Coms  Next Big Thing: Biotech • 83% of local development agenciesplace bio among their top two priorities • 41 States have biotech programs  Next next thing? Nanotech, Bio IT ?

  4. Definitions & Methods • Biotechnology • Firms using genetic and cellular techniques • Biomedicine: diagnostic/therapeutic • Industry-developed definitions & data • Top 51 Metropolitan Areas • Census-defined CMSA/PMSA list • Triangulation of data sources:Research & Commercialization

  5. Pharmaceutical Very large, global firmsTop ten average $15 bio sales Assets are products, distribution, manufacturing expertise Very profitable Industry Segmentation Biotechnology Small, mostly single establishment firmsTop ten average $700 mio sales Principal assets are people, research and future potential Lose money

  6. Nine Metros Dominate Seattle Boston New York Philadelphia San Francisco Why these nine? Washington-Baltimore Los Angeles Research Triangle Park San Diego

  7. NIH Grants Patents Venture Capital R&D Partnerships Startup Firms Established Firms Pillars of Biotech Development Research Commercialization

  8. Leaders vs. the Pack Average Levels of Activity

  9. Research Dispersing 1980s 1990s NIH $ 63% 59% Patents 71% 68% Top 9 Centers Share

  10. Commercialization Concentrating 1980s 1990s Venture Capital* 81% 86% R&D Alliances* 89% 96% New Firms 61% 77% *Base data from early to mid-1990s Top 9 Centers Share

  11. NIH Funding Research Grants, 2000 (Millions) 3rd

  12. Biotech Related Patents Patents Awarded, 1990-1999 5th

  13. Venture Capital Investment, 1995-2001 (Millions) 9th

  14. R&D Alliances Value of R&D Alliances, 1996-2001 (Millions) 6th

  15. Biotech Startups New Biotech Firms Started Since 1990 6th

  16. Established Biotech Companies Firms with 100 or more employees 4th

  17. Washington/Baltimore Cluster • Research Assets • Johns Hopkins, NIH • Cadre of Biotech Firms • Human Genome Sciences, Celera, Med-Immune, Alpharma, Genvec, Neurologic, Macrogenics • Dozens of others in biotech & related fields • BIO: National Industry Association

  18. Washington/Baltimore Cluster • Clearly among the top 9 • Very strong in research • High levels of NIH funding • High volume of patents • Not as strong in commercialization • $85 million in venture capital • $17 million in R&D alliances with big Pharma • Heavily concentrated in Rockville-Gaithersburg

  19. NIH Grant Awards Millions of Dollars

  20. NIH Grant Awards by Sub-Region Millions of Dollars

  21. NIH Grant Awards: Virginia Major recipient communities in Virginia: Richmond Charlottesville Blacksburg

  22. Employment Washington MSABaltimore MSA Note: NAICS 54170 includes R&D in Social Sciences

  23. Number of Firms Note: Includes NAICS 3254 and NAICS 54170 (includes R&D in Social Sciences)

  24. VC Investment: DC/Metroplex Millions of Dollars Maryland D.C. Virginia

  25. Biotech initiatives – Maryland • University of Maryland, Baltimore, opens $300 million BioPark • East Baltimore Biotech Park ($200 mio project; will house 30 to 50 companies; urban redevelopment) • Baltimore Development Corp. opens two Emerging Technology Centers (one near JHU) for bio and IT companies • University of Maryland College Park and University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute launch educational and research initiatives in nano-biotechnology and molecular bioprocessing • Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development (DBED) and Technology Development Corporation (TEDCO) fund early-stage companies • Townsend Capital of Towson launches a company to develop science- and technology-related projects with universities and health care systems

  26. Biotech initiatives – Virginia In Northern Virginia • $500 million Howard Hughes Medical Institute campus (Janelia Farm) to open in Loudoun County • Eli Lilly to open plant in Prince William County • George Mason University awarded $25 million grant (largest in school history) from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases for construction of a Regional Biocontainment Laboratory at its Prince William campus. • George Mason and Italian institute sign a three-year agreement to develop proteomics research program to unveil cancer diagnostics and therapies And in Richmond: • Philip Morris USA to build $300 million research and development facility at the Virginia Biotechnology Research Park in Richmond

  27. Lessons from this region • The share of biotech employment in the overall economy is very small (~1.5 %) • Biotech is heavily concentrated in MD • Maryland ahead in commercialization • Baltimore MSA may become a leader • Strong & pro-active economic development environment in MD • D.C. and VA portion of metro need to focus on gaining in research, but even more so in commercialization • Potential to link to other economic strengths (such as homeland security, IT, telco, etc.)??

  28. General lessons • Biotech tends to cluster (even sub-regionally) • Leaders have an edge (commercialization) • Entrepreneurship & VC are key- Entrepreneurial researchers- Industry-relevant talent- VC • “Bottom 42” -> hard to catch up • Modest payoff- No biotech firm among 25 largest employers- Averages about 3.5 % of manufacturing empl.- Most firms stay small

  29. Thank You! Questions, Comments, Suggestions… Heike Mayer Virginia Tech Phone: 703.706.8122 E-Mail: heikem@vt.edu Brookings Publication: Cortright, J., & Mayer, H. (2002). Signs of life: The growth of biotechnology centers in the U.S. Washington DC: The Brookings Institution. Link: www.brookings.edu/es/urban/publications/biotech1.pdf

More Related