European Union agrees $47 bn chip subsidy plan

The European Union on Tuesday agreed to a chip subsidies plan worth 43 billion euros ($47 billion) aimed at attracting top chipmakers to build factories in the bloc and doubling its share of global output to 20 percent by 2030.
BE SemiconductorHowever, industry experts warn that the relatively modest budget, lack of a domestic market for cutting-edge chips, and regulatory red tape could hinder efforts to catch up with the United States and Asia.

The legislation aims to ensure critical component supplies in the wake of COVID-19 lockdowns that caused significant shortages and reduce the EU’s reliance on Asia, where Taiwan accounts for over 60 percent of global chip production.

Despite the interest from Intel and other companies, Richard Windsor of Radio Free Mobile warns that Europe’s subsidies are likely to be below those available in Asia, highlighting that semiconductors are currently more about geopolitics than economics.

While the EU Chips Act is a good start, the EU must play to its chipmaking strengths and address regulatory issues to compete with Asia, says Christopher Cytera of the Centre for European Policy Analysis.

Latest

More like this
Related

Global semiconductor sales reach $627 bn in 2024: SIA

Global semiconductor sales reached $627.6 billion in 2024, marking...

Who’s Tim Breen, the new CEO of GlobalFoundries?

GlobalFoundries has announced a leadership restructuring with Dr. Thomas...

Samsung beats Intel to reclaim #1 position in semiconductor industry

The latest Gartner report has indicated the size of...

Intel posts 2% drop in revenue as it’s yet to gain from AI

Intel has reported 2 percent drop in its revenue...