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Nexperia Under Dutch Control: Inside the Netherlands’ Push for Semiconductor Sovereignty

Ramo by Ramo
1 July 2026
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In a dramatic move that sent ripples through the global semiconductor industry, the Dutch government took control of Nexperia, a major chip manufacturer based in Nijmegen, citing national security concerns over its Chinese ownership. The decision, which followed an extensive review of foreign investments in critical technology sectors, marks a significant escalation in Europe’s efforts to protect its technological assets.

What Is Nexperia and Why Does It Matter?

Nexperia is one of the world’s largest manufacturers of essential semiconductors — the kind of chips that go into cars, industrial equipment, and consumer electronics. While it does not produce the cutting-edge processors found in smartphones, its components are critical for everyday technology infrastructure. The company, which employs over 14,000 people globally with major operations in Nijmegen, Hamburg, and Manchester, was acquired by Chinese-owned Wingtech Technology in 2018 for approximately $3.6 billion.

The Dutch government’s intervention was driven by fears that Nexperia’s Chinese owners planned to move chip production and intellectual property to China. According to a report in the South China Morning Post, Dutch security services had been monitoring the situation for months before the government acted. The takeover effectively returns control of a strategically vital company to European hands.

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A Pattern of Tech Sovereignty

The Nexperia case is not isolated. In May 2026, the Netherlands blocked a $159 million US takeover of Solvinity, a Dutch cloud and digital identity company that provides critical infrastructure for the government’s DigiD authentication system — used by virtually every Dutch citizen for accessing public services. The US government expressed disappointment at the decision, but the Netherlands held firm.

These actions reflect a broader European awakening to the vulnerabilities of technological dependence. A Dutch parliamentary report in late 2025 called for €176 billion in technology investments to reduce reliance on both American and Chinese tech giants. The European Union has also launched initiatives to build sovereign digital infrastructure, including cloud services and semiconductor fabrication capacity.

What It Means for the Global Chip Industry

The Nexperia takeover signals that European governments are no longer willing to treat semiconductor assets as ordinary commercial enterprises. Chips are now viewed through the lens of national security, economic resilience, and strategic autonomy. For the Netherlands, home to both ASML and Nexperia, the stakes are especially high.

For China, the loss of Nexperia represents another setback in its efforts to acquire foreign semiconductor technology, following years of tightening export controls and investment screening by Western governments. For the global industry, it reinforces the trend toward fragmentation, with countries and regions increasingly seeking to control their own chip supply chains.

The Nexperia case may well become a template for how democratic governments handle foreign ownership of critical technology companies. As the semiconductor industry becomes ever more central to economic and military power, expect more governments to follow the Dutch example.

Image credit: BBC News

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Ramo

Ramo

Ramo is the editorial voice of Mylistingo — an AI and technology news platform based in The Hague, Netherlands. Covering artificial intelligence, machine learning, robotics, and the future of technology, Ramo delivers accurate, accessible reporting for both general audiences and industry professionals. Every article is fact-checked and written to meet Mylistingo's strict no-fabrication editorial standards.

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