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EU Chip Sector Faces 'Bleak Future' Due to US-China Risks

  • Chinese export controls on minerals and magnets among biggest supply threats
  • Europe is heavily dependent on US chip technologies
  • New US law could curb European exports
  • Europe's high energy ​prices and scarce private capital undermine competitiveness

AMSTERDAM, July 2 (Reuters) - Chinese ‌export controls, dependence on the U.S. for technology and the structural weakness of Europe's domestic chip industry mean it faces a "bleak future," an EU-funded report found on Thursday.

The independent report by ​the European Union's Institute for Security Studies and French think-tank Institut ​Montaigne concluded that Chinese export controls on critical minerals and magnets ⁠or the risk of a war in the Taiwan Strait were major threats ​to supply.

Further vulnerability stems from the EU's dependence on the U.S. for technology, including ​design software and the possibility the U.S. could block exports to China by chip-making equipment supplier ASML, Europe's most valuable company.

The U.S. Congress is debating a proposed law that would give ​Washington the power to unilaterally impose export controls on allied nations and their companies.

"While ​Beijing still appears to be the biggest threat, dependence on Washington seems to have become ‌of much ⁠greater concern under the second Trump administration," co-author Joris Teer, a policy analyst at the Institute for Security Studies, told Reuters.

The European Commission is seeking to shore up the bloc's industry and in June proposed a Chips Act 2.0 that ​EU lawmakers must now ​discuss.

The proposal includes incentives ⁠to improve demand for domestically manufactured chips and it also joined Washington's "Pax Silica," an initiative of allied countries cooperating to ​secure supply chains.

In addition to cooperating with allies to counter ​China, Teer ⁠said Europe's "only viable path" is to build on its existing pockets of strength, such as in the chipmaking equipment produced by ASML, to improve leverage.

The report, which drew ⁠on ​industry, political and academic sources, also found that ​factors including Europe's continuing high energy prices, lack of private capital, and the decline of industries that ​use chips have undermined the sector's competitiveness.

Reporting by Toby Sterling; editing by Barbara Lewis

Source: Reuters


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