The European Commission approved €211m of Italian state aid for photonic chips on 9 April 2026 1. DG CNECT, the Commission's digital-strategy directorate, continues a visible pilot-line pattern that already includes the €700m NanoIC green-light on 9 February and the FAMES pilot-line inauguration on 30 January 1. STMicroelectronics, the Franco-Italian chipmaker at the heart of Europe's automotive and industrial semiconductor supply, is among the beneficiaries.
The arithmetic behind the Chips Act has changed underneath the approvals. Intel's cancelled Magdeburg fab and suspended GlobalFoundries Crolles project together removed €37.5bn of planned leading-edge investment. Photonics pilot lines at €211m and €700m operate at a different scale and in a different part of the stack: they cannot substitute for the cancelled logic capacity, and the first Integrated Production Facility and Open EU Foundry designations already dropped the 20% market share number .
For European chip investors and member-state planners the pivot matters because it changes what the Chips Act is spending on. Photonics and advanced packaging are areas where Europe retains an existing industrial base; leading-edge logic at 20% of global market share is not. The Commission has not published a revised target or a formal Chips Act 2.0 roadmap to replace the 2030 figure, and the pilot-line approvals are continuing without one.
