May 15, 2025

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Ensuring the security of semiconductor chip supplies is now one of the EU’s biggest strategic and economic objectives. And Austria — one of the union’s smaller member states — is already home to two of the most important, if unsung, companies in the entire global supply chain.

IMS Nanofabrication, in Vienna’s southern suburbs, and EV Group, north of Salzburg, do not make chips themselves. Rather, they fabricate equipment that is essential for the companies that do — including chip giants, such as Intel in the US and Taiwan’s TSMC.

“Austria is not known for semiconductors and is rarely discussed in supply chain security and geopolitics,” wrote Dylan Patel, an industry consultant and commentator in a recent note. “Despite this lack of notoriety, Austria’s [EVG and IMS] are quietly critical for all advanced semiconductor manufacturing . . . in an age where semiconductors are highly politicised between the [US] and China, we find it humorous that Austria could single-handedly bring the semiconductor supply chain . . . to its knees.”

In Patel’s analysis, Austria has an 82 per cent market share in wafer bonding and a 95 per cent market share in the manufacturing of multi-beam mask writers. Without these, the chips used in everything from flash drives to phone cameras could not be made. For the next generation of even smaller, advanced chips, these Austrian technologies are set to become still more important.

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