“…b the shift in pharma industry to new entities, especially biologicals (such as human proteins and antibodies) (Rovida et al, 2015) and medical countermeasures for biological and chemical warfare and terrorism (Hartung and Zurlo, 2012), but also nanoparticles (Hartung, 2010c;Hartung and Sabbioni, 2011), which inevitably require methodological changes c the crisis resulting from the fact that fewer and fewer therapeutic agents make it to the market, with concurrent demands for reviews to determine whether the candidate compounds were correctly selected for development (Hartung, 2013) d market forces have entered the field of alternatives and the first methods are already resulting in turnovers of tens or even hundreds of millions of euros, with lobbyists creating new pressures (Bottini and Hartung, 2009a) e legislation forestalling scientific developments -the most pertinent example being the 7th Amendment of the EU Cosmetics Directive, whereby animal tests are to be banned -even in the absence of alternatives -in order to create (via legislation) the necessary pressure on industry to develop the alternative approaches which are currently lacking (Hartung, 2008a) f globalisation (Bottini et al, 2007): global markets, global companies, the need for the global harmonisation of regulations, new information technologies....…”