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Europe’s share of the 440-billion-euro ($533 billion) global semiconductor market is around 10%, with the EU currently relying on chips made abroad.
Such dependence on foreign chips and other products has come under the spotlight during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Security concerns regarding some foreign governments have also added to worries about relying on foreign chips used in cars, medical equipment, mobile phones and networks, as well as for environmental monitoring.
The European Union earlier this year agreed to allocate 145 billion euros, equal to a fifth of its virus economic recovery fund, for digital projects.
The 13 countries said they would work together to bolster Europe’s electronics and embedded systems value chain.
“This will require a collective effort to pool investment and to coordinate actions, by both public and private stakeholders”,” they said in a joint statement.
The group will reach out to companies to form industrial alliances for research and investment into designing and making processors and look into funding for such projects.
It will also come up with a European-wide scheme known as an Important Project of Common European Interest which allows for funding under looser EU state aid rules. The group will seek to set up common standards and certification for electronics.
The signatories include Belgium, Croatia, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Italy, Malta, the Netherlands, Portugal and Slovenia.
“A collective approach can help us leverage our existing strengths and embrace new opportunities as advanced processor chips play an ever more important role for Europe’s industrial strategy and digital sovereignty,” EU digital chief Thierry Breton said in a statement.
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