AMSTERDAM: The Royal Palace at the Dam Square, the beginning of the tulip season in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.—Reuters
AMSTERDAM: The Royal Palace at the Dam Square, the beginning of the tulip season in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.—Reuters

LONDON: European cities from Amsterdam to Zagreb have lined up sweetheart deals including free rents, landmark buildings and tailor-made relocation services in a race to house two prestigious EU agencies that will leave London after Brexit.

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) and European Banking Authority (EBA) are both prize spoils from Britain’s decision to leave the European Union in 2019, promising to boost key industries and the local economies of their new hosts.

The competition is fierce, with 19 cities trying to lure the EMA and eight shooting for the EBA. The EMA is the bigger prize, with 890 staff against under 170 at the EBA.

As well as bringing hundreds of skilled jobs, the EMA also attracts 36,000 experts each year to its meetings, making it a boon for local hotels.

More fundamentally, Europe’s one-stop-shop for approving and monitoring the safety of drugs could be a magnet for future pharmaceutical and biotechnology investment.

“Having the EMA will fertilise the life sciences community, which will be fruitful for any city, and it will attract new companies that want to locate in Europe,” said Lars Rebien Sorensen, the former boss of Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk , who is special envoy for Copenhagen’s bid.

“It’s no surprise that countries are trying to sweeten their deals in one way or another,” he told Reuters.

While Frankfurt is viewed by many as the front-runner for the banking agency, the EMA race is more open, with Stockholm, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Dublin, Barcelona, Milan, Vienna and Lille among those lobbying hard.

Some of the contenders plan brand new offices tailored to the EMA’s needs, though with only 16 months between the relocation decision being taken in November and Britain’s scheduled departure in March 2019 it could be touch and go whether they can complete on time.

Others have pitched existing high-profile sites. Barcelona has earmarked space in its iconic gherkin-shaped Glories or Agbar tower, which was illuminated in July with “EMA BCN” in giant lights to press home the candidature. The city has adopted BCN – the code for its airport – for its marketing.

Milan is offering the Pirelli Tower, built in 1958 and a symbol of Italy’s post-war economic recovery, while Athens has selected an old tobacco warehouse – perhaps not the most obvious choice for an EU institution dedicated to public health.

Copenhagen has chosen a block just 10 minutes from the airport and is promising to pay the rent for 20 years.

It is not alone with its subsidised rent offer. Vienna, which has put in bids for both the EMA and EBA, is offering 25 years rent-free, while Warsaw would pay 50 per cent for 10 years.

The European Commission will now assess the various offers by Sept. 30, based on agreed criteria such as access to infrastructure and business continuity, before ministers from 27 EU states vote on relocation in November.

The ballot will be secret — but that does not rule out political horse-trading, with one report already speculating that France may agree to Frankfurt getting the EBA if the EMA is sited in Lille.

Published in Dawn, August 25th, 2017

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