GIL BASHE ON MEDIKA LIFE

Abu Dhabi’s Biotechnology Ambition Comes into Focus at BIO 2026

Capital, talent, scientific infrastructure, and global partnerships are helping position Abu Dhabi as an emerging force in the life sciences sector

At every BIO International Convention, there are countries seeking investment, regions promoting research capabilities, and economic development organizations hoping to attract attention. Abu Dhabi’s presence at BIO2026 felt different.

Its leaders were visible throughout the convention, participating in discussions on biopharma innovation, precision medicine, artificial intelligence, investment, genomics and policy. Partnership announcements emerged throughout the week. Delegations moved between panel discussions and private meetings with investors, entrepreneurs, researchers, and industry leaders. The message was clear. Abu Dhabi is making a strategic effort to become a notable player in biotechnology and the life sciences.

The timing is not accidental.

Around the world, governments increasingly view biotechnology as a strategic investment industry. Scientific innovation drives economic growth. Advanced therapeutics create new manufacturing opportunities. Genomics and precision medicine are reshaping approaches to disease prevention and treatment. Nations that attract talent, investment and scientific expertise position themselves at the forefront of one of the century’s most consequential industries and life-sustaining movements.

Photo Credit: Author – Abu Dhabi has a major presence on the BIO2026 exhibit floor

Abu Dhabi is determined to be among those countries.

Building the Innovation Foundation

Substantial investments and partnerships in infrastructure, research, education and health innovation support the Emirate’s ambitions.

In April 2025, Abu Dhabi launched the Health, Endurance, Longevity and Medicine (HELM) Cluster, an initiative designed to establish a globally competitive ecosystem spanning biotechnology, pharmaceuticals, medical technology, genomics, digital health, artificial intelligence and advanced manufacturing.

Officials project the initiative will contribute AED 94 billion to the economy by 2045, attract more than AED 42 billion in investment and create approximately 30,000 jobs.

Those figures reflect more than economic development goals. They signal a growing recognition that biotechnology is a cornerstone of future growth and global competitiveness.

The Emirate is not starting from scratch. Organizations including M42, PureHealth, Mubadala Bio, Khalifa University, and the Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence have established a foundation that combines research, clinical capabilities, advanced analytics and investment resources. The UAE Genome Program has surpassed 900,000 sequenced genomes, making it one of the world’s largest population genomics initiatives and providing a valuable resource for scientific research and precision medicine.

These investments provide the ingredients necessary to compete. Partnerships provide the opportunity to accelerate progress.

Building Through Collaboration

Biotechnology has long been a collaborative enterprise among private equity and entrepreneurs, academic medicine and corporations, and, now, nations working side by side with other countries’ governments.

Scientific discovery depends on the exchange of knowledge among researchers, entrepreneurs, clinicians, manufacturers, regulators, and investors. No single country possesses every advantage. Successful ecosystems learn how to connect their strengths with those of others.

Abu Dhabi’s recent actions suggest its leaders understand this reality more than anyone else. They act on it.

During the BIO International Convention, the Department of Health – Abu Dhabi announced a strategic collaboration with Sanofi focused on vaccine development and life sciences innovation. The previous year at BIO in Boston, the Department established a partnership with Boehringer Ingelheim that expanded access to the company’s OpnME research platform, creating new opportunities for translational research and scientific discovery.

An additional 2025 agreement was signed with Abbott, focused on pharmaceutical innovation, manufacturing capabilities, and emerging technologies.

These were not isolated announcements. They represented a broader effort to connect Abu Dhabi with leaders across the global life sciences community. That strategy continued at BIO 2026.

On June 23, 2026, the Department of Health – Abu Dhabi announced a strategic partnership with Biocom California, one of the world’s largest life sciences associations representing more than 1,800 biotechnology, pharmaceutical, and medical technology organizations. The agreement creates a formal gateway between the California innovation ecosystem and Abu Dhabi’s growing life sciences sector, strengthening opportunities for collaboration among researchers, entrepreneurs, investors, and innovators across both markets.

The significance of the announcement extends beyond California. It reflects Abu Dhabi’s effort to connect itself to some of the world’s most influential innovation networks and to participate in the exchange of scientific knowledge, talent, and investment that increasingly defines biotechnology leadership.

Moving Up the Biotech Value Chain

If the Biocom agreement demonstrated Abu Dhabi’s commitment to global collaboration, a second announcement made the Emirate’s ambitions even clearer.

On June 24, 2026, the Department of Health – Abu Dhabi, M42, and Mammoth Biosciences announced a partnership to advance gene-editing therapies, clinical research, and advanced therapy manufacturing in Abu Dhabi. The agreement seeks to leverage insights generated through the Emirati Genome Program while supporting the development of next-generation treatments for inherited diseases.

Photo Credit: Author – Emirate leaders confer with BIO CEO John Crowley. Crowley is the former President and CEO of Amicus Therapeutics, a biotech company. He knows from personal experience the importance of the sector in sustaining and saving lives.

This announcement stands out because it moves beyond ecosystem building and into the development of future therapies.

Mammoth Biosciences was co-founded by Nobel Prize-winning scientist Jennifer Doudna, whose pioneering work helped bring CRISPR gene-editing technology into medicine. Under the agreement, Mammoth will contribute its proprietary gene-editing platform, M42 will provide genomics, health, and clinical research infrastructure, and the Department of Health will support the regulatory and research environment needed to advance development.

The collaboration includes plans to introduce Mammoth’s lead clinical candidate, MB-111, into Abu Dhabi’s research ecosystem, support advanced gene-editing clinical trials, establish advanced therapy manufacturing capabilities, and develop local expertise through workforce training programs.

Perhaps most significantly, the partnership highlights how Abu Dhabi is leveraging its genomics investments. The Emirati Genome Program has created one of the world’s most comprehensive population genomics initiatives. The Mammoth agreement represents an effort to translate those insights into therapies targeting inherited diseases.

As H.E. Dr. Noura Al Ghaithi noted when announcing the partnership, Abu Dhabi is focused on translating genomic insights into therapies to address some of the most complex inherited diseases affecting populations in the region and worldwide.

Leadership Matters

The prominence of Abu Dhabi at BIO 2026 reflects sustained engagement from senior leaders. H.E. Dr. Noura Khamis Al Ghaithi, Undersecretary of the Department of Health – Abu Dhabi, and Dr. Mohamed Al Ameri, Division Director of Genome and Biobank at DoH, are among the officials representing the Emirate’s vision throughout the convention.

Their participation reflects a broader commitment. During Abu Dhabi’s 2025 strategic mission to the United States, approximately 40 representatives from 12 organizations attended more than 20 strategic meetings, conducted 16 institutional visits, participated in 9 BIO-related panels, and established 7 new partnerships and agreements.

Such activity underscores an important point. Building a biotechnology ecosystem requires more than investment capital. It requires leadership, patience, and a willingness to build relationships across borders and disciplines.

A Must-Watch Innovation Hub

For decades, discussions about biotechnology leadership have focused on a familiar collection of cities and regions. Boston, San Diego, Basel, London, and Singapore earned their positions through scientific excellence, entrepreneurial activity, and investment.

Abu Dhabi is pursuing a different path.

The Emirate is leveraging capital, scientific infrastructure, genomics, artificial intelligence, policy support, and international partnerships to establish a presence in the global biotechnology landscape. Its strategy recognizes that modern biotechnology advances through collaboration and that scientific leadership increasingly depends upon connecting talent, expertise, and resources across borders.

BIO 2026 demonstrated that Abu Dhabi is no longer simply expressing an ambition to participate in the life sciences sector. Through initiatives such as the HELM Cluster, partnerships with organizations including Sanofi, Boehringer Ingelheim, Abbott, Biocom California, and Mammoth Biosciences, and investments spanning genomics, research, and advanced therapies, the Emirate is laying the foundations for a biotechnology ecosystem with global aspirations.

Whether Abu Dhabi joins the ranks of the world’s leading life sciences hubs remains to be seen – but it should be watched closely. What is increasingly difficult to overlook is the depth of its commitment and the speed with which effort is being translated into action.

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Gil Bashe, Medika Life Editor
Gil Bashe, Medika Life Editorhttps://gil-bashe.medium.com/
Health advocate connecting the dots to transform biopharma, digital health and healthcare innovation | Managing Partner, Chair Global Health FINN Partners | MM&M Top 50 Health Influencer | Top 10 Innovation Catalyst. Gil is Medika Life editor-in-chief and an author for the platform’s EcoHealth and Health Opinion and Policy sections. Gil also hosts the HealthcareNOW Radio show Healthunabashed, writes for Health Tech World, and is a member of the BeingWell team on Medium.

GIL BASHE

Editor in Chief, Medika Life

Meet Medika Life’s Editor-in-Chief, working closely with founding editors Robert Turner and Jeff Livingston, MD. Not your usual health industry executive, Gil Bashe has built a distinctive career spanning more than four decades across health policy, biopharma, life sciences, digital health, eco-health, environmental innovation, and venture capital. These experiences have shaped his enduring commitment to give back and advance more humane, effective care. A champion for innovation that sustains lives and improves how care is delivered, Gil’s perspective was forged in both battlefield and boardroom. He began in health as a combat medic in an elite military unit, later serving as a clergyman tending to the ill; a health products industry lobbyist in environmental affairs; CEO of one of the world’s largest integrated health marketing companies; a principal in a private equity backed venture; a Medika Life author and Health Tech World correspondent; and today as Chair, Global Health and Purpose at FINN Partners, a community dedicated to making a meaningful difference. Gil is also the author of the bestselling book on Amazon, "Healing the Sick Care System: Why People Matter," a call to restore human connection, trust, and partnership at the heart of medicine. The book reflects his lifelong advocacy for patient-centered care and the belief that health systems work best when they honor the dignity, voice and lived experience of people.

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