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Imec CEO calls for stronger AI design push in EU’s Chips Act

By Thomson Reuters May 19, 2026 | 8:59 AM

By Toby Sterling

ANTWERP, Belgium, May 19 (Reuters) – Europe should aim to create home-grown AI chip design companies, the new head of Belgian research ​hub imec said on Tuesday, as Brussels ‌prepares a package of measures dubbed Chips Act 2.0.

Patrick Vandenameele said Europe’s first 43 billion euro ($50 billion) Chips Act, launched in 2023, had helped stabilise its industry in the ‌face ​of U.S. and Chinese competition.

But the ⁠next round, due to ⁠be presented by the European Commission on May 27, should help build a stronger AI chip design ecosystem in a market dominated by U.S. ​companies.

“If we do not get the Nvidias of the future, if we don’t get any of ⁠those in Europe, that will ⁠be a problem,” said Vandenameele, who ​took over as CEO of imec, Europe’s leading chip research ​laboratory, in April.

The Commission is including its ‌updated chip strategy as part of a larger “tech sovereignty” package. The original Chips Act failed to achieve goals of attracting advanced manufacturing and doubling the bloc’s ⁠global chip market share to 20% by 2030.

Vandenameele said Europe’s future does not lie in chip production, but building ⁠on existing ‌strengths in equipment and design. He ⁠cited firms including ASML, ASM, BESI and ​EV ‌Group as Europe’s strongest assets.

For advanced ​manufacturing, Vandenameele ⁠said the obvious path would be to encourage Nvidia chipmaker TSMC of Taiwan to expand its existing European manufacturing project, under construction in Dresden, to a more advanced facility.

($1 = 0.8615 euros)

(Reporting by Toby Sterling; Editing ​by Alexander Smith)