Europe needs to be willing to take risks – otherwise it will lose out on the medicine of the future
Paris, October 13, 2025. At HealthTech Innovation Days (HTID) in Paris, the Life Sciences Acceleration Alliance (LSAA) issued an urgent warning that the European Union is falling further behind in the global competition for innovation and capital in the life sciences sector.
“Europe is at a crossroads,” LSAA Chairman Rainer Westermann emphasized in his keynote speech. “While the US attracts more than half of the world’s venture capital, Europe’s biotech and life sciences innovations are in danger of falling behind in global competition. We have outstanding research, but too little capital, too many hurdles, and too much uncertainty. Hope is not a strategy – the EU needs decisive political decisions to bring innovations to market maturity and keep them here.”
The LSAA called for seven concrete measures to secure Europe’s competitiveness and restore the confidence of investors, entrepreneurs, and researchers:
- Tariff-free trade conditions for medicines and their components
- Accelerated implementation of the European Life Sciences Strategy with clear timetables and KPIs
- EU-supported late-stage financing for high-growth biotech companies
- Targeted industrial incentives to strengthen European production capacities
- Predictable and innovation-friendly IP and regulatory frameworks
- Focused support for SMEs, including rare diseases
- Structured review of European pricing and reimbursement systems
“Without a predictable regulatory framework, capital for the transition from research to production, and an industrial policy vision, the EU will continue to watch as groundbreaking therapies are implemented and produced in other regions,” said Westermann.
The alliance emphasizes that Europe has everything it needs to take a leading role: scientific excellence, strong clinical expertise, and industrial know-how. Now it is a matter of showing courage.
“We can change this—if politics, capital, and science act together. The EU needs less fragmentation and more determination. Because one thing remains true: Nothing ventured, nothing gained.”

