The European Commission published its 2026 State of the Digital Decade report on Wednesday 17 June, and its headline number undercut the law Brussels adopted a fortnight earlier 1. The EU holds 9% of the global semiconductor market against its own 20% target for 2030. That share has not crept towards the goal since the first Chips Act in 2023. It has fallen.
The gap reflects what the original target counted. When Brussels set 20% by 2030, the planned capacity included Intel's 30bn euro Magdeburg fab and the 7.5bn euro GlobalFoundries Crolles project. Intel cancelled Magdeburg; GlobalFoundries suspended Crolles. Roughly 37.5bn euros of assumed leading-edge capacity left the plan, and the baseline collapsed with it.
Chips Act II handed The Commission direct equity-stake authority in fabs on 3 June, so Brussels can fund construction without a member state acting as intermediary . The scorecard showing the gap wider arrived 14 days later. Two weeks is no time at all, and a fab takes years; the data is not a verdict on a law adopted alongside CADA . The 9% measures how far behind the start line the bloc stands before any new law has had time to act.
