this post was submitted on 18 Nov 2025
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Taiwan strongly backs Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.'s (NYSE:TSM) first European chip plant, former president Tsai Ing-wen said on Tuesday during a visit to the fab site in Dresden, Germany.

Tsai said Taiwan believes in the Dresden project as deeply as it believes in Taiwan Semiconductor itself after European Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. president Christian Koitzsch welcomed her to "Silicon Saxony." She received a briefing from Koitzsch and Taiwan Semiconductor Europe general counsel Gunnar Thomas, then met Taiwanese engineers to hear about construction progress and life in Germany, the Taipei Times reported on Thursday.

...

European Semiconductor Manufacturing — a joint venture between Taiwan Semiconductor, Bosch, Infineon Technologies AG (OTC:IFNNY), and NXP Semiconductors NV (NASDAQ:NXPI) — began construction last August and plans to launch operations in 2027. Dresden officials said the fab represents the city's largest semiconductor investment ever and is expected to create more than 5,000 jobs.

...

As the Taipei Times reports, city of Dresden, in the German state of Saxony, is also building Germany’s largest and most modern vocational school to train more than 2,000 electrical and electronic specialists, Hilbert said.

As the Silicon Saxony cluster — home to more than 500 companies and research institutes, such as Infineon, GlobalFoundries and the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft — continues to expand, the demand for skilled workers is growing rapidly, he said.

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[–] CosmoNova@lemmy.world 7 points 2 months ago

It‘s good to know a company is still willing to produce chips in Germany after the deal with Intel fell through. Despite the bleak images national news paint about the country and it‘s capabilities. There is a lot of talent and innovation to be found here.

That being said Saxony will have to seriously up their game on renewables. Something many of it‘s voters despise and downplay as identity politics and woke propaganda. Well suck it, because you will see a lot more „windmills“ and solar panels soon if you want to attract and keep tech companies.