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Europe to incentivise governments to buy EU-made chips by startups, document shows

By Thomson Reuters May 28, 2026 | 10:54 AM

By Foo Yun Chee

BRUSSELS, May 28 (Reuters) – The European Commission wants governments to buy chips made by EU startups as it seeks to reduce ​Europe’s reliance on U.S. and East Asian ‌products, a document seen by Reuters shows.

The proposal, dubbed Chips Act 2.0, supplements the original Chips Act implemented three years ago, which has so far failed to achieve its goals to attract ‌advanced ​manufacturing in a bid to double ⁠the bloc’s global chip ⁠market share to 20% by 2030.

EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen will, on June 3, lay out details of the latest attempt to develop and control ​critical technologies and services, which has been driven mainly by tensions with the United States and China ⁠and their dominance in these ⁠areas. Europe makes about 10% of global ​semiconductors.

While the Chips Act focused on supply side measures, the ​Chips Act 2.0 will focus on the demand ‌side, the EU document said.

“Through Demand Accelerators, the Chips Act 2.0 will also aim to boost the use of EU-designed and EU-made chips by linking suppliers with ⁠users via offtake agreements and a demand forum,” the document said.

“To stimulate demand and support EU-based start-ups and scale-ups, the ⁠Chips Act 2.0 ‌will deploy public innovation procurement, as ⁠a strategic tool,” the paper said.

The EU ​semiconductor ‌ecosystem needs €120 billion ($139.81 billion) in public and ​private investments ⁠by 2035, of which some €30 billion would be for the advanced semiconductors manufacturing foundry, according to the document.

The Commission also proposed fast-tracking environmental approvals for chip facilities.

($1 = 0.8583 euros)

(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; Editing by Barbara Lewis ​and Diti Pujara)