Norway’s Lace Lithography Secures $40 Million for Chipmaking Breakthrough
Norwegian deep-tech startup Lace Lithography has raised $40 million in fresh funding to accelerate development of its next‑generation chipmaking technology. The company aims to disrupt conventional semiconductor manufacturing by offering a more flexible and cost‑efficient alternative to today’s complex lithography systems.
Targeting the Heart of the Semiconductor Bottleneck
At the core of Lace Lithography’s vision is a new approach to patterning silicon wafers, the critical step that defines how many transistors can be packed onto a chip. Traditional photolithography equipment, especially advanced EUV systems, is extremely expensive and dominated by a handful of global suppliers. Lace is developing tools designed to reduce capital expenditure, simplify process steps and enable manufacturers to iterate new chip designs more rapidly.
By focusing on higher throughput and lower operational complexity, the startup is positioning its technology as a way for both established foundries and emerging players to expand capacity without the steep costs typically associated with leading‑edge nodes.
Funding to Scale R&D and Commercial Partnerships
The newly raised $40 million will be directed primarily toward advanced R&D, pilot line installations and the expansion of engineering and customer support teams. The company plans to deepen collaborations with European and Asian chip manufacturers, using demonstration projects to validate performance gains in real production environments.
Industry observers see the round as another signal that investors are increasingly backing semiconductor equipment innovation, not only chip design. With ongoing concerns around chip supply chains, energy use and escalating fabrication costs, tools that promise greater efficiency and design freedom are drawing heightened interest.
Positioning Norway on the Semiconductor Map
Lace Lithography also strengthens Norway’s position in the global deep‑tech ecosystem. While the country is better known for energy and maritime industries, a growing cohort of hardware‑focused startups is emerging, supported by regional investors and research institutions. If Lace’s technology delivers on its promise, it could help diversify Europe’s semiconductor capabilities and reduce dependence on a narrow set of global suppliers.

