Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Tech Sovereignty
10JUN

Intel kills its €30bn Magdeburg megafab

3 min read
10:31UTC

Europe's flagship sub-2nm chip factory is dead. Intel's CEO blamed weak customer commitments and a $2.9bn quarterly loss.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Europe lost its only planned leading-edge chip fab when Intel pulled out of Magdeburg.

Intel cancelled its €30bn Magdeburg megafab outright in early 2026. CEO Lip-Bu Tan cited insufficient customer commitments and financial risk in a staff memo 1. Intel had posted a $2.9bn net loss in Q2 on $12.9bn revenue and cut 15% of its workforce. The project, which would have been Europe's first sub-2nm fab, had already slipped from a 2029 to a 2030 target before cancellation. Germany now faces an unresolved question about subsidy repayment.

The Magdeburg project was the centrepiece of the EU Chips Act, a 2023 regulation designed to raise Europe's share of global semiconductor production from roughly 8% to 20% by 2030. Three flagship greenfield fabs were meant to anchor that target. With Magdeburg gone, Europe has no sub-10nm facility under construction or planned. The gap is capability, not merely capacity. Mature-node fabs serve automotive and industrial markets. Leading-edge logic, the kind needed for AI accelerators and advanced processors, remains entirely imported.

Intel's financial position made the decision predictable. The company has been losing market share to TSMC-manufactured designs from AMD, Apple, and Nvidia for years. Tan's turnaround plan prioritises Intel's existing US fabs in Ohio and Arizona, where customer commitments and federal subsidies under the US CHIPS Act are firmer. Europe offered €10bn in German state aid, but without anchor customers willing to commit to Magdeburg wafers, the subsidy alone could not close the business case.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A semiconductor fab (short for fabrication plant) is the factory that makes the chips inside every phone, car, laptop, and data centre. Europe currently makes very few of the most advanced chips, relying almost entirely on factories in Taiwan and South Korea. Intel, the American company famous for making the processors in most PCs, announced it would build a giant new chip factory in Magdeburg, Germany. The plan would have cost €30 billion; roughly the budget of Belgium's entire national defence for six years; and would have been Europe's first factory capable of making the most advanced chips. Intel cancelled it in early 2026. The company had lost $2.9 billion in a single quarter, was cutting 15% of its staff globally, and could not find enough customers willing to commit to buying the chips the new factory would make. Without locked-in orders, a factory that costs €30 billion to build is a €30 billion gamble. The cancellation is a major blow to Europe's goal of making 20% of the world's chips on European soil by 2030. That target is now effectively out of reach.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Intel's Q2 2024 financial crisis is the proximate trigger, but the deeper root cause is a customer commitment gap baked into the EU Chips Act's design. The Act's 2030 market share target assumed European automotive and industrial chipmakers would anchor fab demand.

But Bosch, Infineon, NXP, and STMicroelectronics all predominantly source from existing suppliers on mature nodes. They did not need, and would not commit capital to, an Intel 1.5nm fab that prices at premium to TSMC's comparable N2 process.

A second root cause is the subsidy structure itself: the EU's €8bn direct subsidy to Intel was milestone-contingent and non-fungible. Unlike the US CHIPS Act's investment tax credit (a revenue-positive instrument for any profitable fab), EU state aid requires a viable project at the application stage. Intel's foundry business had no verified external customer pipeline when it applied, meaning the project was speculative from the start.

The land-suitability problem at the Heyrothsberge site; protected agricultural classification requiring reclassification; added a permitting tail that pushed the timeline to 2030 and increased financial exposure. A one-year delay on a €30bn project compounds financing costs by roughly €300–400m at prevailing rates.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    EU Chips Act's 20% global semiconductor market share target by 2030 is structurally unachievable without a leading-edge fab replacement for Magdeburg.

    Medium term · 0.9
  • Risk

    Germany and the EU face a legal and diplomatic complexity over the unresolved €6.8bn subsidy commitment, with no clear precedent for recovery from a cancellation at this scale.

    Short term · 0.75
  • Precedent

    The cancellation will reduce the willingness of future foreign chipmakers to apply for EU state aid on milestone-contingent terms, increasing the premium required to attract investment.

    Long term · 0.8
  • Opportunity

    With the Magdeburg site and planning permissions partly developed, a pivot to a different technology partner (TSMC 2nm expansion, Samsung) at lower scale is theoretically possible, though politically complex.

    Medium term · 0.4
First Reported In

Update #1 · Europe's chip ambitions meet reality

EE Times· 13 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
European cloud and open-source industry
European cloud and open-source industry
European cloud providers gain a binding procurement mandate from CADA, confirmed by Gartner's $12.6bn sovereign-cloud figure for 2026. The $40bn Pax Silica commitment signals Brussels will not extend sovereignty discipline to the silicon layer, and the missing €350m Sovereign Tech Fund leaves open-source maintenance infrastructure unfunded beneath those same clouds.
United Kingdom
United Kingdom
Science Secretary Kendall's £1.1bn Hardware Plan on 8 June chose demand-side instruments, advancing £150m to British chip startups via the British Business Bank, where Brussels chose supply-side alliance membership. Britain joined Pax Silica before the EU and has no collective EU procurement leverage; the Hardware Plan is the bilateral answer to the same silicon gap.
United States
United States
Pax Silica, a State Department initiative launched in December 2025, secured EU membership the same afternoon Brussels adopted its cloud sovereignty law. Ambassador Puzder had named CADA a red line against the EU-US trade framework; the narrowed CADA scope and the $40bn chip commitment together represent the settlement Washington sought.
France
France
France was the only EU state to oppose Pax Silica accession at COREPER on 3 June, asking the Commission to clarify the Council's steering role inside the alliance. Paris backed CADA and hosts Mistral AI; a $40bn US-chip commitment contractually narrows the commercial space for the sovereign AI model that France is trying to scale.
European Commission
European Commission
Von der Leyen framed CADA on 3 June as keeping 'most of our market open to like-minded partners', and the Commission's EVP Virkkunen simultaneously required majority-European ownership for the €4.12bn AI Gigafactories call. Brussels is managing rather than resolving the silicon dependency by asserting regulatory control at the cloud layer while formalising the chip relationship through Pax Silica.
European Central Bank
European Central Bank
The ECB's digital euro pilot drew more than 50 PSP applications and is naming 10 to 30 participants in July, advancing on its own monetary mandate without requiring a Commission act. Its trajectory this week is the inverse of CAIDA's: the sovereignty instrument that restricts no US firm is the only one keeping its published calendar.