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European Oil Markets
3JUL

Infineon opens €5bn Dresden fab early

2 min read
10:26UTC

Infineon opened its €5bn Dresden power-chip fab on 2 July, months early, the first EU Chips Act flagship to deliver after Magdeburg and Crolles collapsed.

EconomicAssessed
Key takeaway

Real delivery at the power node; Europe's leading-edge logic dependency stays untouched.

Infineon opened its €5bn Smart Power Fab in Dresden on 2 July, several months ahead of schedule 1. The new Module 4 doubles the German chipmaker's Dresden capacity, runs 300mm wafers for power and analog chips, and creates around 1,000 jobs. Ground was broken in May 2023.

The opening ends a two-year run of failure on the EU Chips Act, the bloc's flagship law for funding home-grown semiconductor capacity. Intel's cancelled €30bn Magdeburg fab and GlobalFoundries' suspended €7.5bn Crolles project had stripped €37.5bn from the programme and left Europe's chip share at 9% against a 20% target . Every prior flagship slipped or died; this one opened before its deadline.

Power and analog silicon runs AI data-centre power delivery, electric vehicles and renewables, and Infineon already leads that node. It does not touch leading-edge logic, the sub-7nm fabrication the Chips Act was written to reclaim, where Europe still depends wholly on TSMC, Samsung and Intel fabs abroad. Dresden brings real capacity online now, at the one layer where Europe never lost ground.

The site draws roughly €1bn in public money, co-financed by the EU Chips Act and Germany's IPCEI ME/CT (Important Project of Common European Interest on Microelectronics). It joins a Dresden cluster that keeps filling out: TSMC's ESMC (European Semiconductor Manufacturing Company) fab took its first equipment weeks earlier for 2027 production , and GlobalFoundries ran the first all-European chip flow with Qualinx at the same site .

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Infineon is a German company that makes power chips, the components that manage electricity inside things like electric cars, solar inverters and the huge server farms that run AI. It just opened a new factory in Dresden, a German city with a growing cluster of chip plants, and finished the job months earlier than planned. This is different from the more famous kind of chip Europe is trying to build: the tiny, ultra-advanced processors used in smartphones and AI systems, which Taiwan's TSMC and America's Intel still make almost all of. Europe's win here is real, but it is a win in the type of chip it was already good at, not the type it still cannot make at home.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Infineon's speed reflects an integrated-device-manufacturer model, in which the fab, chip design and end customer sit inside one company, cutting the coordination risk that killed Magdeburg's fabless-customer model. Leading-edge logic needs the opposite structure: a foundry serving external customers at volume high enough to justify a facility costing tens of billions, and no European firm runs that model at sub-7nm.

ASML sells its EUV scanners to whichever fab can absorb a machine costing hundreds of millions of dollars at volume, and today that is TSMC, Samsung and Intel, none of which are building leading-edge capacity on European soil. A European leading-edge fab would need a domestic chip-design demand base Europe's own industry does not yet generate.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Dresden delivers, the logic gap stays open

Infineon Technologies AG· 8 Jul 2026
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