• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Merck Frosst closure a blow

Antoine

Full Member
Inactive
Reaction score
0
Points
210
That hurts !

By Jason Magder, Montreal Gazette July 15, 2010

www.montrealgazette.com/business/Merck+Frosst+closure+blow+Clement/3282650/story.html

MONTREAL-Industry Minister Tony Clement said Thursday the closing of the Merck Frosst Centre for Therapeutic research in Kirkland is a "blow" to the whole biotech industry.
Merck and Co. announced the closure of its research lab last Thursday, along with 180 jobs that will be lost or relocated. The decision marked the end of drug development in Canada for the pharmaceutical giant.
"I'll be honest with you, Merck's decision was a hit to us, a blow," Clement said. "I talked to Merck last May and encouraged them to make another decision. I knew they were looking at their operations worldwide and I wanted Montreal to continue. It was not to be."
Clement made the comments on a visit to the Genome Québec Innovation Centre at McGill University.
He acknowledged that several pharmaceutical giants are changing their business models to invest in biotech firms developing drugs at a more mature stage, rather than trying to develop products in house. For that reason, Clement said he was pleased the government of Canada increased its $75 million contribution to Genome Canada. However, he would not say if that contribution would be recurring.
"For the government of Canada, and the government of Quebec, public support for research, development and commercialization has never been stronger. We've got to find successful ways to build new businesses and also link to current businesses," Clement said.
"We continue to engage with established businesses, like AstraZeneca, and with new and emerging businesses to say that Canada is the best place to invest. Our tax structure is the best in the highly industrialized world, and the kind of support you'll get from public funding is second to none in the G7."

© Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette


By Ross Marowits, The Canadian Press

www.finance.sympatico.ca/home/drugmaker_merck_closing_8_plants_8_research_sites_including_in_montreal/21f66f71

Quebec risks mini brain drain with Merck's closure of Montreal research centre
MONTREAL - Quebec risks a mini brain drain after pharmaceutical giant Merck & Co. decided to end decades of in-house research in Canada by closing its Montreal research facility and lay off most of its nearly 200 employees.
The Merck Frosst Centre for Therapeutic Research in Kirkland, west of Montreal, will be phased out by the end of the year as part of a global restructuring that will affect roughly 16,000 jobs worldwide.
Between 10 and 50 of the 180 people employed at the Montreal research centre will be offered new positions at Merck's research facilities in New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
"The majority of employees will have to unfortunately leave the company," spokesman Vincent Lamoureux said.
"Today's decision must not negate the important scientific contributions realized by our researchers, but it's a minority of them that will unfortunately be offered positions inside the company's research network."
Despite the closure, Merck said it intends to invest $100 million in research and development in Quebec over the next five years. The money will be spent with external partners, including universities, biotech companies, clinical research in hospitals and private clinical research.
Merck also plans to expand its Montreal packaging capabilities after investing $32 million last year on the facility. Nearly 350 employees work at the separate facility in Pointe-Claire, that makes consumer, pharmaceutical and animal health products.
Once the research centre is closed, Merck will employ about 1,620 people in Canada, including more than 1,100 in Quebec. Some 140 marketing and sales people were laid off earlier this year with the integration of its pharmaceutical operations.
The Montreal research centre is one of eight manufacturing plants and eight research sites that will be closed.
Merck Frosst Canada spent $93 million last year at the Montreal research facility, making it one of Canada's 20 largest corporate R&D spenders.
It doubled the number of research and development staff over the last decade to nearly 300. But about 100 jobs were lost and not replaced when the company shifted its focus in 2009 from inflammatory ailments to infectious diseases.
Quebec Premier Jean Charest said the job losses were an unfortunate result of a global corporate restructuring.
"When there are reorganizations it happens that we lose jobs, but generally we are winners in this industry," he told reporters.
Economic Development Minister Clement Gignac said top Merck management convinced him Thursday that the decision wasn't related to unhappiness with the province's economic policies or pharmaceutical strategy.
While Quebec can't escape the global impact of restructuring by the pharmaceutical industry, the province has done pretty well compared to others jurisdictions, he said.
"I'm disappointed but I'm not too scared about the fact that we will suddenly see brain drain in Quebec," he said in an interview.
Dr. Michel Bouvier, deputy director of the University of Montreal's Institute for Research in Immunology and Cancer, said some highly skilled researchers will flee the province, but many francophones will remain and seek jobs with other companies or in academia.
"There will be a brain drain but it will probably not be a major brain drain," he said.
Bouvier said it was a sad day for Montreal, Quebec and Canada and for biomedicial research, but not a total surprise.
"We were expecting that for the last six months. People were trying to keep their hope up but we all thought there was a high risk that this would be happening."
In addition to pressures resulting from Merck's US$49.6 billion merger last November with Schering-Plough Corp., the pharmaceutical industry has been moving away from basic innovative research to later stage drug development.
Bouvier said the government needs to leverage Merck's $100 million commitment through matching funds to ensure Montreal remains a leader in innovative drug discoveries.
The merger with Schering-Plough made Merck the world's second-biggest drugmaker but the company said it would eliminate about 15 per cent of the two companies' combined workforces.
Those cuts are intended to save the New Jersey-headquartered company about US$3.5 billion a year, starting in 2012. Merck said Thursday that the restructuring plans announced so far will bring savings of about $2.7 billion to $3.1 billion in 2012.

© Copyright (c) The Canadian Press


 
Back
Top