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EU Chips Act
Legislation

EU Chips Act

EU law committing €43bn to double Europe's chip production to 20% global share by 2030.

Last refreshed: 8 July 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Is the EU Chips Act 20% target still achievable after the Magdeburg cancellation?

Timeline for EU Chips Act

#112 Jul

Co-financed the fab alongside German IPCEI funding

European Tech Sovereignty: Infineon opens €5bn Dresden fab early
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Common Questions
How much money is the EU spending on the Chips Act?
The EU Chips Act targets €43bn in combined public and private investment, with the public portion drawn from EU and member-state sources.Source: european-tech-sovereignty
Will the EU really produce 20% of the world's chips by 2030?
Analysts are sceptical. The Magdeburg cancellation removed the largest single contribution to the target, leaving ESMC Dresden as the main advanced-node facility.Source: european-tech-sovereignty
Which chip fabs have been approved under the EU Chips Act?
The European Commission issued its first Integrated Production Facility designations in 2024 to four sites, including ESMC Dresden and STMicroelectronics facilities.Source: european-tech-sovereignty

Background

The EU Chips Act came into force in September 2023, setting out a 43bn euro public and private investment package to double Europe's share of global semiconductor production from roughly 10% to 20% by 2030. The legislation created three pillars: a research and innovation initiative, capacity-building measures to attract large fabs, and a supply-chain monitoring mechanism to detect shortages early. Its first tangible test came with the European Commission's issuance of official Integrated Production Facility designations in 2024, granting four sites access to the Act's fast-track permitting and subsidy regime.

The Act was conceived in the wake of the 2021-2022 global chip shortage, which exposed Europe's near-total dependence on Asian foundries for advanced logic and automotive chips. It was championed by Commission Executive Vice-President Margrethe Vestager and passed with near-unanimous political support. The 20% market-share target drew scepticism from analysts who noted Europe had no advanced-node fabs and that catching TSMC from a standing start within seven years was implausible without a step-change in private investment.

The Intel Magdeburg cancellation and the GlobalFoundries Crolles suspension have placed the Act's ambitions under serious strain. The Dresden ESMC joint venture, a partnership between TSMC, NXP, Infineon, and Bosch, is Europe's most credible near-term advanced-node site, yet its 10bn euro investment is dwarfed by what was originally planned for Magdeburg. The Commission's own Digital Decade scorecard put the bloc's chip share at 9% in June 2026, against the 20% target, and has stopped restating the 2030 goal since the Magdeburg and Crolles setbacks.

As of July 2026, Infineon's Dresden Smart Power Fab is the first Chips Act flagship to actually open, delivering 5bn euro of Module 4 capacity on 2 July 2026, co-financed by the Act alongside Germany's IPCEI ME/CT programme. The delivery is landing at the mature, power-semiconductor node Europe already led, not the leading-edge logic node the Act was designed to win back; both cancelled flagships, Intel's Magdeburg and GlobalFoundries' Crolles, had targeted advanced logic.

More questions
Has any EU Chips Act flagship fab actually opened?
Yes. Infineon's 5bn euro Smart Power Fab in Dresden opened on 2 July 2026, the first Chips Act flagship project to open, though at a mature power node rather than leading-edge logic.Source: event