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Ireland U-turns to oppose EU pharma reforms after intense lobbying

Ireland U-turns to oppose EU pharma reforms after intense lobbying

Irish Times23-05-2025

Ireland has pivoted to oppose contentious
European Union
reforms aimed at broadening access to new drugs and medicines, following a blitz of lobbying from big
pharmaceutical
companies over recent months.
The proposed reforms would cut back a current eight-year window pharma companies have to exclusively sell new drugs they produce, before cheaper generic competitors enter the market.
Taoiseach
Micheál Martin
, Ministers and senior civil servants have all been on the receiving end of a significant push from the pharma sector, to get Ireland to adopt a pro-industry position in the EU debate.
Irish health officials had been keen on the reforms improving access to new drugs. Allowing generic drugmakers into the market earlier would potentially result in cheaper prices for the
Health Service Executive
when buying medicines for public patients.
READ MORE
Speaking on Thursday, Minister for Enterprise
Peter Burke
confirmed the
Government
had shifted its stance. It now 'accepted' companies should retain the current eight years of market dominance over new drugs they developed, he said.
This means Ireland has joined Denmark, Germany, Italy, Sweden and several other EU countries who support the pharma industry's position, heading into a vote in Brussels in the coming weeks.
A compromise that would encourage companies to conduct more clinical trials in EU states, to earn back one lost year of protection from generic rivals, is the other option on the table in the vote.
The original idea was to allow companies win back extra years of 'protection' over their research and data from clinical trials if they rolled out new drugs across the EU more quickly.
[
US tariffs on pharmaceuticals risk shortages of lower-cost generic drugs
Opens in new window
]
Pharmaceutical firms staunchly oppose the proposals, which they claimed would make companies less likely to develop new medicines in Europe.
Several pharma giants based in Ireland, such as
Pfizer
,
Eli Lilly
,
Novo Nordisk
and
Johnson & Johnson
(J&J), stepped up pressure on the Government to back the industry line, new logs of lobbying disclosures show.
Much of the lobbying focused on getting the ear of Mr Martin and
Department of the Taoiseach
secretary general John Callinan.
Oliver O'Connor, head of the
Irish Pharmaceutical Healthcare Association
(IPHA), argued that there were alternative ways to improve access to new medicines, in recent correspondence to several departments.
The industry group chief wrote to Mr Martin directly, calling for the Government to take account of the major role the pharma sector played in Europe's economy, lobbying disclosures show.
A lobbyist from J&J raised the matter with
Robert Watt
,
Department of Health
secretary general, on the margins of a think tank event in Dublin earlier this year. The pharma firm followed up in writing afterwards, making the case for 'protecting' the existing system.
When the new Government was formed both Minister for Health
Jennifer Carroll MacNeill
and Mr Burke got letters of congratulations from the head of J&J's Irish operations, Michaela Hagenhofer.
The US pharma company asked that support for companies' intellectual property rights 'be reflected' in Ireland's position at the European level, according to filings disclosing the lobbying.
Danish pharma giant
Novo Nordisk
, which makes the blockbuster weight-loss drug
Ozempic
, also made representations. The head of Novo Nordisk's Irish operation, Nina Therese Hovland, lobbied Minister for Finance
Paschal Donohoe
at a dinner hosted by consulting firm
EY
.
United States
president
Donald Trump
's threat of coming trade
tariffs
on pharmaceutical imports has put pressure on the Government to signal it supports the sector, which is a major employer and corporate tax contributor.
Mr Martin met a delegation representing the Irish and European pharma industry in Government Buildings in mid-April. Lobbying logs show the meeting discussed trade tariffs and the EU reforms.

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