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Australia’s life sciences sector gains commercial infrastructure boost

Eon Project aims to boost Australia’s life sciences sector while retaining talent, featuring insights from Nick Smith

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Ion Project aims to boost Australia’s life sciences sector while retaining talent, featuring insights from Nick Smith

In Short:
– Video highlights Australia’s life sciences sector, focusing on infrastructure for commercialising research and retaining local talent.
– Kurraba Group’s Eon Project aims to create Sydney’s first life science hub, supporting various tech sectors and sustainability standards.

Australia’s life sciences sector is being reshaped by a push to build the specialised infrastructure needed to commercialise research locally and retain top scientific talent.

Nick Smith, CEO and Co-Founder of Kurraba Group, speaking with The Connector host Belinda Coates, highlighted how Australia produces world leading intellectual property but has often lacked the domestic systems to turn innovation into scalable industry.

This gap has historically driven researchers and entrepreneurs to global hubs such as Boston and the UK, where commercialisation pathways are more established.

Kurraba Group is now attempting to change that trajectory through its Ion Project in Sydney, designed as Australia’s first fully integrated commercial life science hub supporting biotech, medtech, agritech and energy tech companies.

Ion will offer flexible laboratory environments from early stage “bench on demand” setups through to corporate grade facilities, while embedding strong sustainability standards to reduce the environmental footprint of energy intensive lab operations.

The model is designed to bring research, development and commercialisation into a single connected ecosystem.

Kurraba Group also plans expansion into Melbourne’s Parkville precinct and Brisbane’s emerging innovation zones, with a long term ambition to strengthen Australia’s sovereign capability before exploring wider Asian, UK and US markets.

However, the sector’s growth will depend heavily on streamlined government support and investment in enabling infrastructure.

For more information, visit HarperB.


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