The European Investment Bank is granting a €250 million loan to the microelectronics specialist AT&S (Austria Technologie & Systemtechnik AG).
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Listed on the Vienna stock exchange, the loan will go towards the company’s research and development activities and help finance the construction of a new research centre at its headquarters in Leoben, Austria.
AT&S is one of the leading manufacturers of high-end printed circuit boards and integrated circuit substrates (also known as IC substrates), and the only one in Europe in an industry dominated by Asian companies.
Modern microchips like the processors in smartphones and computers and the cores in modern graphics cards contain billions of transistors packed into the smallest possible space.
IC substrates connect the tiny inputs and outputs of powerful microchips to the much larger structures on printed circuit boards. They create a bridge between the nanoworld of semiconductors and the microworld of printed circuit boards.
Today, IC substrates are found in the housings of almost all high-performance microchips, which are essential for smartphones, PCs, 5G networks, supercomputers, 3D scanners, servers, AI applications and more. They are crucial for all forms of data transfer, data analysis and data storage.
At an EU level, the new centre of expertise in Leoben will help the European Union to achieve digital autonomy, a priority under the European Chips Act. The goal is to create a chip ecosystem to ensure Europe’s security of supply in microchips and to strengthen its digital technology production capabilities.
AT&S has a global presence with production sites in Austria (Leoben and Fehring) and plants in India (Nanjangud), China (Shanghai and Chongqing) and South Korea (Ansan, near Seoul). ■
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