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25
Nov
2025
London Life Sciences Week Shows UK Biotech is Open and Thriving

Rosie Rodriguez, senior vice president of growth, Relation Therapeutics
London has always been multicultural, multidisciplinary, and in constant motion. It is a global mosaic where academia, entrepreneurship, finance, policy, and creative arts intersect with ease.
That character was evident during London Life Sciences Week, which has grown far beyond its origins around the Jefferies London Healthcare Conference.
What began as a finance event has become something broader and more meaningful: a week in which scientific, entrepreneurial and investment communities come together across the city with a shared sense of purpose.
This evolution has happened both organically and with intention. While London Life Sciences Week (LLSW) emerged from the longstanding cluster of activity surrounding Jefferies, it is now also formally supported and jointly hosted by the UK BioIndustry Association (BIA), MedCity, London & Partners, the Mayor of London, and the UK Government. Their combined support has created something coordinated and substantial, an effort to amplify London’s strengths and reinforce its position as a global centre for life sciences.

Patrick Vallance
Sadiq Khan, Mayor of London, and Lord Patrick Vallance, Minister for Science, Innovation and Nuclear, started off the week with a simple and confident message: London is open for innovation, and everyone building the future of science is welcome here.
While some large pharma companies have recently paused major UK investments, the conversations across the week suggested that this pullback may be out of step with what is happening on the ground. London has real momentum. Especially when scientific expertise is being challenged in some parts of the world and anti-immigrant policies are on the rise, London’s stance was reassuring to the many immigrants in the city and a shrewd countermove in the global competition for scientific talent.
London’s life sciences community has reasons for optimism. The city attracted £1.6 billion of venture investment into life sciences over the past year, more than Paris, Stockholm and Berlin combined and leads continental Europe by over a billion pounds. During the typically gray and chilly third week of November, LLSW attracted more than 70 events, 1,300+ investors, and 2,400 participating companies.
Conversations from coffee meetings in King’s Cross to evenings in Soho had a grounded optimism. JPM now has real competition, people often remarked while taking in the scene.
London is not replacing San Francisco, but the value of being here, the density of science and talent, the productivity of meetings, the sense of community, is no longer in question. People spoke not about hype but about substance: good science, strong teams, and collaboration that feels natural rather than forced.
The deals and company updates around Jefferies were extensively covered, BiotechTV tracked and covered them fantastically in real time. The part that sits between the headlines, and what I wanted to capture here, was the atmosphere across London: the people, the conversations, and the sense of community that defined the week.

Emma Tinsley, CEO, Weatherden
London Bio stood out among the many great events of the week for how clearly it reflected the spirit running through LLSW and offered a moment that quietly captured the sector’s resilience. Led by Emma Tinsley (Weatherden, Elevara), Yasin Siraj, BACKED VC, and Jack O’Meara (Aerska), it had a relaxed but purposeful atmosphere.
Emma opened by noting that between the three organizers their ventures had collectively raised almost £200 million in the past year, BACKED VC’s £100 million seed fund, Elevara’s £70 million round, and Aerska’s £21 million raise. It was not shared as a boast, but as a reminder that thoughtful, science-led companies continue to be backed, even in a year often described as difficult.
Their guests brought that same tone to the room. As he steps down as CEO of Recursion, Chris Gibson reflected on the past, present and future, thoughtful and candid, with light moments of humour, including his plan to climb Kilimanjaro with Luke in February.
When Sir Jonathan Symonds, GSK Chairman, spoke about the importance of building partnerships rather than transactions, I realized I was nodding more vigorously than intended. Reader, if you permit, a small and shameless plug follows: at Relation, where I have the privilege of helping shape and grow the organization, our collaborations with GSK reflect exactly that spirit.

Jack O’Meara, CEO, Aerska
Throughout the rest of the week, what stood out was how naturally people interacted. Researchers, investors, engineers, founders and industry leaders moved fluidly between discussions. There was a sense of community, not aspirational, but real, built slowly and deliberately over time.
People were focused not only on their own companies but on strengthening the wider ecosystem and making London an even better place to do impactful science. The city’s strength lies in its people: biologists, chemists, machine learning scientists, experimentalists, engineers, and computational scientists who choose to build here.
Without this talent, innovation is not possible, and London continues to attract and cultivate exceptional people.
As a dual European-British national and as a Londoner, I felt pride throughout the week. The pride came from seeing how far the ecosystem has come, how collaborative and open it feels, and how committed people are to building something of long-term value. London Life Sciences Week showed that London is not aspiring to become a global center for life sciences; it is already operating as one.
What feels most exciting is that its future is being shaped not by any single institution, but by a collective, a community choosing, together, to build something meaningful for the patients that are waiting.




























