• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

ESN.net

See the shift before it lands

  • Sponsored Post
  • Events
  • Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

BIO Asia-Taiwan 2019 Showcased Biotech as the Region’s Next Growth Engine

July 30, 2019 By admin Leave a Comment

One of the largest events on this year’s Asian biotechnology calendar brought together more than 1,500 people from 25 countries to meet and explore business opportunities in Taiwan’s emerging biotech sector.

United under the conference theme “Biotech as the Next Growth Engine for Asia,” companies spanning Asia, Europe and the U.S. came together for four days of meetings, seminars, workshops, partnering meetings and an exhibition featuring over 600 companies.

President Tsai Ing-Wen participated in the ribbon cutting ceremony marking the opening of the four-day exhibition component of BIO Asia-Taiwan. “Taiwan has long been internationally lauded for its achievements in healthcare,” President Tsai noted. “We are making contributions to the world and showing the world that Taiwan can help.” President Tsai further stated that Taiwan’s biomedical R&D capabilities and strengths in the ICT sector will help spur Taiwan into a major hub for biomedical research and development in the Asia-Pacific.

Jim Greenwood, President and CEO of BIO, delivered Opening Ceremony remarks, where he expressed optimism for continued industry growth, both in Taiwan and globally. “I want to thank President Tsai for her leadership and determination to bring Taiwan fully into the global biotech community. We’re excited about the progress we can make as partners,” noted Greenwood. “I know we will forge many collaborations ahead for the betterment of the human race. Together we will fuel, feed and heal the world.”

Johnsee Lee, Chairman of the Taiwan Bio Industry Organization and Chair of the BIO Asia-Taiwan Organizing Committee, highlighted the importance of the biosciences industry for the Asian economies. “Asia accounts for 60 percent of the world population and is the most populous and the fastest growing region in the world. We believe biotechnology is not only essential to the health and well-being of the people but can also become the next growth engine for Asia,” according to Lee. “By partnering with BIO, we strive to make BIO Asia-Taiwan one of the best platforms for the biotech community in Asia.”

The BIO One-on-One PartneringTM system was deployed for the first time at this venue, offering attendees an easy to use platform to communicate directly with licensing and collaboration partners. More than 1700 partnering meetings were scheduled using the system, enabling participants to move efficiently from identification of prospective partners to discussion and negotiation.

BIO Asia-Taiwan 2019 featured over 1,700 booths, including an International Zone, where 18 countries and states had their own pavilions showcasing their best companies, products and services. These pavilions include the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Belgium, Italy, and South Korea, India, Australia, New Zealand, Poland, Thailand, Austria, Hong Kong, Germany, Singapore, the Philippines, and Malaysia, altogether hosting more than 100 foreign exhibitors.

About BIO
BIO is the world’s largest trade association representing biotechnology companies, academic institutions, state biotechnology centers and related organizations across the United States and in more than 30 other nations. BIO members are involved in the research and development of innovative healthcare, agricultural, industrial and environmental biotechnology products. BIO also produces the BIO International Convention, the world’s largest gathering of the biotechnology industry, along with industry-leading investor and partnering meetings held around the world. BIOtechNOW is BIO’s blog chronicling “innovations transforming our world” and the BIO Newsletter is the organization’s bi-weekly email newsletter.

Filed Under: events

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • Garamendi Blasts Trump’s FY27 Budget as a War Budget Disguised as Fiscal Policy
  • The Sports Rights Bubble and Where It Breaks
  • India’s Moment and Why It Keeps Getting Delayed
  • What’s Actually Driving Urban Crime Trends
  • The Data Center Land Rush and Who Wins It
  • Why Longevity Science Keeps Failing to Deliver
  • The College Degree Is Not Dead — It Is Just Repricing
  • What Happens to Social Media When the Algorithms Change
  • The Real Reason Boeing Can’t Recover
  • Why Water Is the Next Resource War

Media Partners

  • JVQ.net: Just Very Quick
  • Referently.com
  • Referently.com
Tech Goes Nuclear
The Camera You Brought
No Deal in Islamabad
Polymarket Under the Microscope
Nine Hours
Hottest March on Record
Gates on the Hill
Artemis II Is Home
The Post Office Is Running Out of Money
AI Finds the Holes
Xoople's $130M Bet: Earth Observation as Infrastructure
U.S.-Iran Ceasefire: Assessment, Reactions, and Issues for Congress
Why Lebanon Complicates the Ceasefire
Turing Frontier and the Human-in-the-Loop Layer
U.S.-Iran Ceasefire and the Nuclear Dispute
SiFive's $400M Round Is About More Than Chips
The Strait of Hormuz in the U.S.-Iran Ceasefire
Qlik Is Right About the Hard Part of AI
Regional and International Reactions to the Ceasefire
NUBURU and the Counter-Drone Hardware Wave
What People Actually Build With a Raspberry Pi: Case Studies From the Field
Raspberry Pi: The Complete Professional Guide
The Dance at Stephansplatz: What European Identity Actually Looks Like
The Release Valve: Gulf Escalation and the Limits of Pressure
Schröder’s Agenda 2010: The Reform That Rewired Germany
Full AI Accounting Isn't a Futuristic Scenario Anymore
The Retirement Gender Gap Has a Hidden Dimension: Spousal Fund Withdrawal
Most 401(k) Plans Let Spouses Drain Retirement Accounts Without Your Knowledge
IRAs Hold $17 Trillion — and Offer Spouses Zero Federal Protection
How the Federal Government's Own Retirement Plan Handles Spousal Consent — and Where It Falls Short

Media Partners

  • Media Presser
  • 3V.org
  • Press Club US
What Russian Aggression Has Done to European Identity
Regular and Predictable: The Only Strategy Treasury Has
Who Is Actually Buying U.S. Debt Now
The Shift from Task Robots to General Purpose Machines Is Happening Faster Than Policy Can Track
Fujifilm Refreshes Rio Takeda Sponsorship Site Ahead of JLPGA Tournament
From Therapy to Augmentation: The Neural Implant Transition Nobody Has Regulated
House Armed Services Democrats Press Hegseth on USS Gerald R. Ford Deployment Strain
Teamsters President to Join Henry Ford Genesys Nurses on Picket Line
Ukraine Is Burning Russia's Oil Cash Flow
The Beginning of the End: Iran’s Regime Enters Its Terminal Phase
Birch Coffee Keeps Growing in NYC with Square Powering the Back End
What Actually Holds Europe Together
Retention Over Turnover: Clasp’s $20M Bet on Fixing Healthcare Hiring
Why People Still Track Their Steps
Why People Keep Returning to Neighborhood Cafes
Why Morning Routines Still Matter, Part 2
Why Home Desks Keep Evolving
The Week Traffic Slowed but the Infrastructure Spoke Louder
The Subtle Shift Toward Cashless Living, Part 2
Why Weather Feels More Personal Lately
Migration and the Limits of European Identity
Industrial Darwinism on the Battlefield: Ukraine’s Drone War Is Forcing a Rethink
The Silent Appointment of Zeina Jallad: A Failure of Oversight at the UN Human Rights Council
The Security Subsidy: Why European Rearmament Remains Stalled
Rubio: If NATO Bars Us From Using Our Own Bases, It's a One-Way Street
Oil Flows Disrupted: Ukraine Strikes Hit Russia’s Baltic Export Arteries
Amazon Blinks on the Right to Strike
In Defense of the Death Penalty Bill — A Response to European Moralizing
The Most Predictable Man in Washington
The Arctic Council Is Frozen Solid

Copyright © 2022 ESN.net

Media Partners: Technologies, Market Analysis & Market Research and Exclusive Domains, Photography