Europe’s Digital Sovereignty Push
A significant majority of Europeans, over 73%, are concerned about the continent’s dependence on U.S. technology companies (Proton). This sentiment is translating into policy, with a growing number of EU member states, including France and Spain, proposing social media bans for adolescents and investigating major platforms like Meta, X, and TikTok over child safety concerns (Reuters). These national actions highlight a frustration with the perceived slow pace of EU-wide enforcement under the Digital Services Act (DSA), which allows for fines of up to 6% of a company’s global turnover for non-compliance. The push for digital sovereignty is clear, though it risks escalating trade tensions with the U.S. (The Hindu).
Semiconductor Strategy Gains Traction
The EU is making tangible progress in its mission to double its global market share in semiconductors to 20% by 2030 under the European Chips Act (EU). The initiative, backed by €43 billion in public and private funding, recently granted special status to four major semiconductor projects, streamlining their administrative and permit processes (European Commission). This includes a new joint venture facility in Germany involving TSMC, Bosch, Infineon, and NXP, which is expected to produce 480,000 wafers annually by 2029 (European Commission). The strategy is a direct response to recent supply chain disruptions and aims to reduce critical dependencies on non-EU suppliers.
AI Regulation and Investment Collide
The EU’s landmark Artificial Intelligence Act, the first comprehensive AI legal framework globally, is now in force, with key provisions on prohibited practices taking effect as of February 2025 (European Union). The regulation employs a risk-based approach, banning applications like government-run social scoring while placing stringent requirements on high-risk systems. Simultaneously, the European Innovation Council (EIC) has launched its 2026 work programme, earmarking over €1.4 billion for funding strategic technologies, including AI, and supporting the scale-up of innovative companies (EIC). This dual approach of regulation and investment highlights the EU’s delicate balancing act: fostering innovation while attempting to set a global standard for trustworthy AI.
Catch the next Gist for the continent’s moving pieces.
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