Supply Chain Resilience Ensured as EU Chips Act Takes Effect

The EU Chips Act has officially ⁣come into force today,⁢ putting in place a comprehensive‌ set of measures to ⁢shore up the European Union’s semiconductor ‌supply chain resilience and reach its target⁤ to double its current‍ global market share to 20% by 2030.

The act is made of three pillars, the first of which is a ⁢Chips ⁣for Europe Initiative, a program that aims to⁣ bridge ‍the gap​ between research ⁤and innovation by promoting advanced semiconductor technologies‍ by European businesses.

The second ⁤pillar consists of efforts to attract new investment by⁤ granting fast-track permitting to “first-of-its-kind” facilities in⁢ Europe and designating additional ⁢centers ‍of excellence.

Finally, a coordinated mechanism is set to be established between EU member states and the European Commission — the EU’s executive branch —  enabling‌ the bloc ‌to monitor the supply of semiconductors, estimate demand, anticipate shortages, and if necessary, trigger the activation of a crisis intervention. A semiconductor alert system was set up on ⁣18 April ‍2023 ​to allow‌ any stakeholder to report semiconductor supply chain disruptions.

The EU is ⁢investing $3.6 billion of its own funds to support the act, with the aim of ⁤attracting a further $43.7 billion in private investment. The act comes into force five months after the European Council and the‌ European Parliament reached an agreement on a final draft.

“With the entry into force today‍ of ⁢the European Chips Act, Europe takes a decisive step forward⁣ in determining its own destiny. Investment is already happening,⁢ coupled with considerable ⁢public funding and a robust regulatory framework,” said Thierry Breton, commissioner for Internal ​Market, in comments posted alongside the announcement.

“We are becoming an industrial powerhouse​ in the markets of the future —‍ capable of supplying ourselves and the ​world with both mature and advanced⁣ semiconductors. Semiconductors that are essential building blocks of the technologies that will shape our future, ⁣our industry, and our‌ defense base,” he said.

EU not the only jurisdiction to support domestic‌ chip making

The European⁢ Union’s Chips Act is not the only​ government-backed plan aimed at shoring up domestic ‍chip manufacturing in the wake of the supply chain crisis that⁤ has plagued the semiconductor industry in recent years. In⁢ the past year, the US, UK, Chinese, Taiwanese, South Korean, and⁢ Japanese governments have all announced similar plans.

Last month, US President Joe Biden escalated the country’s trade ‌war with China​ by signing an executive ⁣order that ⁤will further restrict US investment in sensitive technology industries in China. The new ​rules will impact three sectors — semiconductors and microelectronics, quantum information⁤ technologies, and certain artificial intelligence systems.

“This program will seek to‌ prevent foreign countries of⁢ concern from exploiting ‌US investment in this narrow set of technologies ‌that are…

2023-09-23 12:48:02
Post from www.computerworld.com rnrn

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