DutchNews.nl - DutchNews.nl brings daily news from The Netherlands in English 12 June 2026
Newsletter Donate Advertise
  • News
  • Life in the Netherlands
  • Jobs
  • Partner content
  • Podcast
  • Advertise
  • About us
  • Search
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Politics
  • Art and culture
  • Sport
  • Europe
  • Society
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Housing
  • Education
  • News
    • Home
    • Economy
    • Politics
    • Art and culture
    • Sport
    • Europe
    • Society
    • Environment
    • Health
    • Housing
    • Education
  • Life in the Netherlands
    • Latest
    • Opinion
    • Books
    • Travel
    • 10 Questions
    • Learning Dutch
    • Inburgering with DN
    • Food & Drink
    • Ask us anything
  • Jobs
  • Partner content
  • Podcast
  • Advertise
  • About us
    • Donate
    • Team
    • Advertise
    • Contact us
    • Writing for Dutch News
    • Privacy
    • Newsletter
  • Search

Government puts €360 million more into high-risk tech fund

June 11, 2026
Photo: Depositphotos.com

See more DutchNews articles in your Google search results

See more DutchNews articles in your Google search results

Add as a favourite source on Google Add DutchNews as a favourite source on Google

The government and state-backed investor Invest-NL are putting an extra €360 million into a fund for high-risk technology start-ups, as the Netherlands tries to reduce its dependence on chips and other critical technology from outside Europe.

The injection takes the Deep Tech Fonds, set up in 2022, to €610 million, economic affairs minister Heleen Herbert told MPs on Thursday.

The fund invests in young companies working on technology such as semiconductors, photonics, quantum computing and AI, which typically need large amounts of capital and take years to bring a product to market.

The ministry is adding €130 million and Invest-NL €230 million, meaning each now contributes €305 million. The original €250 million has largely been spent, the Financieele Dagblad reported, going to 14 companies including chip firms Axelera AI and Nearfield Instruments and quantum chip maker QuantWare.

“These are exactly the companies that can make the biggest contribution to our future earning power, reduce dependencies and solve major social challenges,” Herbert said in a statement. The ministry said the fund’s investments so far have attracted almost €400 million in private capital alongside the public money.

Funding gap

The extra cash comes as concern grows about Dutch and European reliance on American and Chinese technology, highlighted by the government’s intervention last year in Chinese-owned chip maker Nexperia, which triggered a diplomatic row with Beijing.

A report published this week by tech lobby group Techleap found European deep tech companies raise between 3.4 and 4.2 times less per funding round than their American counterparts.

In the Netherlands, 71% of first investments in such firms come from public money, the report said, calling for specialised funds of at least €1 billion and tax incentives for private investors.

Share this article Add DutchNews to Google
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Copy URL
Economy Tech
Thank you for donating to DutchNews.nl.

We could not provide the Dutch News service, and keep it free of charge, without the generous support of our readers. Your donations allow us to report on issues you tell us matter, and provide you with a summary of the most important Dutch news each day.

Make a donation
Latest
Show more
What does the EU migration pact mean for the Netherlands?
Podcast: The Book Arrest and Organ Joke Edition
Seven injured in major explosion at Amsterdam fitness centre
Plan to screen students working with "sensitive tech" scrapped
Test which spares breast cancer sufferers chemo not used enough
NewsHomeEconomyPoliticsArt and cultureSportEuropeSocietyEnvironmentHealthHousingEducation
Life in the NetherlandsLatestOpinionBooksTravel10 QuestionsLearning DutchInburgering with DNFood & DrinkAsk us anything
Partner content
Advertise
About usDonateTeamAdvertiseContact usWriting for Dutch NewsPrivacyNewsletter
© 2026 DutchNews | Cookie settings

Help us to keep providing you with up-to-date news about this month's Dutch general election.

Our thanks to everyone who donates regularly to Dutch News. It costs money to produce our daily news service, our original features and daily newsletters, and we could not do it without you.

If you have not yet made a donation, or did so a while ago, you can do so via these links

The DutchNews.nl team

Donate now

Dutchnews Survey

Please help us making DutchNews.nl a better read by taking part in a short survey.

Take part now