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European Tech Sovereignty
16JUL

Crolles fab suspended as GF pulls back

3 min read
09:32UTC

The second of Europe's three Chips Act flagship fabs has stalled, freezing €2.9bn in French state aid.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

The EU Chips Act's milestone-gated subsidy design freezes aid when private partners retreat.

GlobalFoundries suspended its participation in the joint €7.5bn fab with STMicroelectronics in Crolles, France, in mid-2025. The company stated it would align expansion "with customer demand and market conditions" 1. The pullback froze €2.9bn in French state aid, because EU rules require private co-investment milestones to be met before subsidies can flow.

The technology choice contributed to the withdrawal. The Crolles facility was planned around FD-SOI (fully depleted silicon-on-insulator), a specialised chip architecture used in automotive sensors and IoT devices. FD-SOI has a narrower customer base than mainstream FinFET (the transistor design in most modern processors). STMicroelectronics is the world's leading FD-SOI manufacturer, but GlobalFoundries' recalculation reflected the reality that demand projections for this niche node were insufficient to justify the co-investment.

EE Times identified the broader structural problem: the Chips Act's subsidy architecture creates a deadlock when private partners pull back 2. Subsidies are milestone-gated, meaning the public money cannot be released to keep a project alive when the private partner withdraws. The mechanism works well in an upcycle. In a demand downturn, it freezes rather than stabilises. France now holds €2.9bn in committed state aid with no clear path to disbursement, and STMicroelectronics is left without a construction partner for a facility it cannot build alone.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Near Paris, in a town called Crolles, France and STMicroelectronics (a major European chipmaker) planned to build one of Europe's most advanced semiconductor factories. The idea was to build it jointly with GlobalFoundries, a large American chipmaker, using a technology called FD-SOI that is particularly efficient for chips used in cars, internet-connected devices, and wireless communications. GlobalFoundries pulled out in mid-2025. The American company said demand from customers was not sufficient to justify the investment. France had promised nearly €3 billion in state aid to make the project happen; money that is now frozen because there is no factory to build. The setback matters because France had positioned this factory as central to its national plan to rebuild domestic chip manufacturing. Without a replacement partner, France will continue to depend on factories overseas for the kind of specialised chips its automotive and aerospace industries need.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

FD-SOI (Fully Depleted Silicon-On-Insulator) is a specialised process technology. It delivers measurably better power efficiency than conventional bulk CMOS at comparable nodes, but its ecosystem of compatible IP blocks and design tools is significantly smaller than mainstream FinFET.

The customer base consists primarily of STMicroelectronics' own products, certain NXP automotive lines, and selected Samsung designs. That is insufficient volume to justify a new €7.5bn fab without extraordinary state support or a new anchor customer.

GlobalFoundries' financial position compounds the technology constraint. The company went public in 2021 at a valuation that subsequently fell by over 50%. Its capacity investments since 2022 have been concentrated in the US, incentivised by the US CHIPS Act's investment tax credit and defence customer demand.

The European project, by contrast, offered milestone-contingent French state aid with no equivalent tax-credit mechanism, meaning GF bore construction risk without a proportionate risk-transfer instrument.

A third cause is the EU Chips Act's milestone disbursement architecture. The €2.9bn French state aid was unlockable only upon verified construction progress, meaning GF needed to commit equity capital before any public subsidy arrived. For a company with constrained balance sheet capacity, that sequencing was prohibitive.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    France's €2.9bn state aid allocation is stranded without a partner to receive it, requiring either a new JV partner search or a redeployment decision with new EU state aid notification.

    Short term · 0.85
  • Risk

    STMicroelectronics loses its most credible path to domestic European volume FD-SOI capacity, increasing dependence on GF's US fabs for its automotive and IoT product lines.

    Medium term · 0.8
  • Precedent

    The second major EU Chips Act flagship suspension in 12 months signals to future applicants that milestone-contingent EU state aid carries execution risk that US CHIPS Act tax credits do not, weakening Europe's position in future fab attraction negotiations.

    Long term · 0.75
First Reported In

Update #1 · Europe's chip ambitions meet reality

EE Times· 13 Apr 2026
Read original
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