ABPI celebrates a month of major investment commitments into UK life sciences
Following two new major investments in UK life sciences in April - £300 million by AstraZeneca [1], and £150 million by Boehringer Ingelheim [2] - the ABPI points to the real progress unlocked by the landmark UK-U.S. Pharmaceutical arrangement [3].
Since the UK-U.S. arrangement was announced in December, there have been 13 pharmaceutical investment commitments across the UK, totalling £1.4 billion in inward investment [4].
Commenting on the news, Richard Torbett, Chief Executive of the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI), said:
"This has been a remarkable month for UK life sciences, and for the patients who ultimately benefit when the world's leading pharmaceutical companies choose to invest here.
"AstraZeneca's decision to resume and even boost the £300 million expansion of its Macclesfield and Cambridge research campus, and Boehringer Ingelheim's launch of a new £150 million artificial intelligence accelerator in King's Cross, are both powerful signals that the UK's position as a global destination for life sciences investment is being restored. Together, they represent nearly half a billion pounds of commitment to research that will help find new medicines for patients.
"Just six months ago, the picture looked very different. Several major companies had paused or withdrawn significant investments, citing a UK environment that was not internationally competitive. The UK-U.S. pharmaceutical arrangement reached in December, and particularly the increase to the NICE baseline cost-effectiveness threshold, has begun to shift how industry sees the UK.
“When companies believe that the medicines they develop will be properly valued and made available to NHS patients, they invest. While there is more to do, we are starting to see that positive feedback loop that we’ve all been trying to achieve.”
- Health and Access to Medicines
- Life Sciences
Last reviewed date: 29 April 2026
Next review date: 29 April 2029