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PRIVACY
Enterprise

Life sciences sector can have bigger impact on Welsh economy says EKF Diagnostics boss

Julian Baines said he has never been "anti-sharing" but the Welsh Government has to play its part

Julian Baines

The chief executive of one of Wales’ leading life sciences firms, Julian Baines of EKF Diagnostics, says the sector has an opportunity to have a much bigger impact on the economy, providing the Welsh Government reaches out more.

Penarth-born Mr Baines said the diagnostics sector, often seen as the poor relation to pharma, has never been in better shape with its immediate testing capacity for diseases such as diabetes and other underlying conditions that can make people more susceptible to Covid-19.

In April EKF, which has a market capitalisation of more than £200m and a global workforce of 320, secured a major order to provide the NHS in England, through Nottingham-based Source BioScience, with Covid-19 testing kits.

The sample collection Primestore MTM device, owned by US firm Longhorn Vaccines and Diagnostics, is the first time the product has been manufactured and distributed in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

EKF are now capable of producing 12,000 testing kits a day from a new manufacturing line in Penarth where it is also creating new jobs.

However, despite reaching out to Public Health Wales and the Life Sciences Hub Wales, offering to supply the product in Wales, so far that offer has fallen on deaf ears.

Mr Baines said: “It is a very tough gig for the Welsh Government, but I think EKF could genuinely help.

“We know a lot of people. We have access to major hospital groups in the US which we could talk to with the Welsh Government and try and help.