Since 13 April 2026, no European Commission communication has restated the Chips Act's 20% global semiconductor market share target by 2030 1. DG CNECT has issued none. Commissioner Virkkunen, the European Commissioner for Tech Sovereignty, Security and Democracy, has issued none. The silence extends a pattern running since the first Integrated Production Facility and Open EU Foundry designations dropped the number last October .
The Intel Magdeburg cancellation and GlobalFoundries Crolles suspension removed the mathematical basis for the target. Formally abandoning it would invite political embarrassment; repeating it would invite ridicule. The Commission has chosen neither. It is letting the figure lapse without acknowledgement, routing Chips Act execution into photonics and advanced packaging pilot lines while leaving the original ambition on the policy shop-front.
National capitals planning their own semiconductor strategies have nothing new to calibrate against. Without a replacement benchmark, member-state industry ministries cannot set their own 2030 production goals in any form that links back to a shared EU aggregate. The strategic retreat is happening through state-aid approvals and pilot-line awards, not through a speech, and the replacement metric has yet to appear in any public document.
