Intel has cancelled plans for a so-called megafab in Germany and a packaging plant in Poland. It also plans to shift assembly and test facilities in Costa Rica to its larger Malaysian and Vietnamese sites. The news comes from a written by CEO Lip-Bu Tan, who says the move will help Intel in its goal of becoming a "more financially disciplined company" as it looks to cut costs company-wide.
"Going forward, we will follow a systematic approach to growing our [[link]] factory footprint that’s fully aligned with the needs of our customers. We will be judicious and disciplined as we allocate capital – because that’s what great foundries do," says CEO Lip-Bu Tan.
"With that in mind, we have decided not to move forward with previously planned projects in Germany and Poland. We also plan to consolidate our assembly and test operations in Costa Rica to our larger sites in Vietnam and Malaysia. Costa Rica remains a large and important Intel site that’s home to key engineering teams and corporate functions."
This is a big problem for big fabs, which are made using tremendously large and heavy metal shells, as they cannot have traditional supports throughout the building due to the use of large lithographic systems. EUV systems, which would need to be used to produce chips in the [[link]] Angstrom era, are extremely large, and the that Intel is hoping will be the key to future process nodes are absolutely ginormous.
This all led to the by then-CEO Pat Gelsinger, who had previously championed the cause of in-house manufacturing and foundry services at Intel.
The company's new CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, appears less enthusiastic about Intel's manufacturing arm altogether, admitting the company may stop producing new cutting-edge process nodes without securing a large customer for its foundry services, which means producing chips for another company. Currently, Intel doesn't have one of those, and even produces many of the tiles used in its own chips in rival foundry TSMC's fabs.
With the loss of the German megafab and packaging plant in Poland, Intel's manufacturing footprint in Europe is focused largely on locations in Ireland alone. It also plans to shake up its global footprint, moving assembly and test facilities in Costa Rica to its larger facilities in Asia, like the .
It's a little outdated now, but for a rough idea of the spread of fab facilities globally, check out this map we've put together below.
Even in the US, where there's a push for more domestic manufacturing, especially in semiconductors, by consecutive governments, Intel is ramping down construction. Lip-Bu Tan has said it is slowing construction on fabs in Ohio, which had already seen a delay to 2030 or beyond.
Intel is clearly struggling to justify its enormous spending at this moment in time. The company is also in the process of cutting staff to around 75,000 employees by the [[link]] year's end, which seems like a lot, but is a 15% reduction in staff. The company had already cut staff over preceding years, however. It had around 125,300 employees in June, 2024, which decreased to 102,600 by March 2025. That puts the cuts to 75,000 into perspective a little.
It's an apples-to-oranges comparison but Nvidia has somewhere around 36,000 employees as of 2025. Intel has manufacturing facilities, which Nvidia does not, but some will be wondering why Nvidia is one of the richest companies on the planet while working with less resources, while Intel is struggling to make more money than it spends with more. Intel's operating income was a loss of $3.1 billion in Q2, 2025, an increase from this same time last year.
All of which does not paint a happy picture for Intel. The company's new CEO is determined to cut costs and turn its fortunes around, but whether it looks the same as the company we've come to know over the past few decades in the process, only time will tell.

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