On Wednesday 10 June, GlobalFoundries and the Dutch startup Qualinx said they had completed the first fully European end-to-end manufacturing flow for a security-critical chip at GF's Dresden fab 1. Qualinx's GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System) positioning chip, built for aerospace, defence and critical-infrastructure use, was designed, taped out (sent to the fab for production) and manufactured entirely within Europe, with no design data or materials leaving the continent. Deutsche Telekom provides the European-only data processing.
The chip sits on a mature process, not leading-edge logic, so it does not move the share The Commission's scorecard tracks. GF aims for a fully automated "Trusted European Flow" by the end of 2026, with commercial availability for defence and critical-infrastructure customers in 2027. The Dresden fab is co-funded by the Chips Act, whose revised version handed the Commission direct fab-equity authority in April .
The two fabs the 20% target was written around, Magdeburg and Crolles, stayed dead this window. The one sovereign-manufacturing delivery came instead from a chipmaker and a startup organising it themselves, in trusted production for defence rather than the volume capacity the headline target needs. It also sits beside the ESMC (European Semiconductor Manufacturing Company) Dresden line, which confirmed its 2027 production schedule this month after TSMC shipped its equipment from Taiwan .
GF's own press release was unreachable at publication; this account rests on GlobalFoundries' statement as carried by HPCwire and Silicon Saxony 2.
