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Reuters
Reuters
Business
Foo Yun Chee

Europe seeks semiconductor boost, first quantum computer

FILE PHOTO: European Union flags flutter outside the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, in this file picture taken October 28, 2015. REUTERS/Francois Lenoir/File Photo

The European Union wants to produce a fifth of the global output of cutting-edge semiconductors at the end of this decade and make its first quantum computer in five years, as part of efforts to cut its dependence on non-European technologies.

The EU plan called 2030 Digital Compass comes as the COVID-19 pandemic exposes the 27-country bloc's reliance on key technologies owned by Chinese and U.S. companies.

The plan cited the importance of semiconductors, used in connected cars, smartphones, internet-linked devices, high performance computers and artificial intelligence, and where a global shortage is shutting down car factories around the world.

"It is our proposed level of ambition that by 2030 the production of cutting-edge and sustainable semiconductors in Europe including processors is at least 20% of world production in value," according to an EU document seen by Reuters.

European Commission Vice President Margrethe Vestager and EU industry chief Thierry Breton will present the plan on Tuesday.

The EU plan recommended investing in quantum technologies, saying that these could be a game changer in developing new medicines and to speed up genome sequencing.

"It is our proposed level of ambition that by 2025, Europe will have the first computer with quantum acceleration paving the way for Europe to be at the cutting edge of quantum capabilities by 2030," the document said.

The EU plan also called for 10,000 climate-neutral facilities by 2030 to help Europe develop its own cloud infrastructure and the doubling of unicorns, or companies with a $1 billion valuation, in the same period.

It also aimed to cover all European households by a Gigabit network by 2030, with all populated areas covered by 5G.

The Commission's plan will need approval from EU countries and the European Parliament before it can be implemented. Bloomberg first reported on the EU document.

(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; editing by Jonathan Oatis)

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