º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Pragmatic Semiconductor points to progress as losses widen amid significant investment

The chipmaker has secured substantial equity investment to realise its ambition of disrupting the industry

A worker at Pragmatic Semiconductor's existing NETPark facility.(Image: Supplied by Brands 2 Life PR)

Losses have widened at chip manufacturer Pragmatic Semiconductor as investment into its North East production lines continues.

New accounts for the flexible chip specialist, which has pioneered low cost integrated circuits that are thinner than a human hair, show it incurred operating losses of more than £36.7m across 2023, a 62% rise on the previous year. That came on increased revenue of £1.7m, up from £1.5m.

Bosses described significant progress made throughout the year and said the losses are expected to continue until the firm increases production at its new Durham factory on the 15-acre Pragmatic Park site, the initial stages of which were completed last year housing its second fabrication line in addition to an existing facility at NETpark. Pragmatic, which has headquarters in Cambridge and employs about 240 people, is hoping to produce more than five billion chips per year on the line at a much lower cost to existing silicon products.

Read more:

Read more: £1bn battery storage project poised to take shape at Teesworks

The numbers follow a £182m equity fundraise announced in December and including the backing of investors M&G Catalyst and the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Infrastructure Bank. Pragmatic has called the move the largest European semiconductor venture raise ever, with the money earmarked for expansion of Pragmatic Park and the potential creation of hundreds of jobs.

Pragmatic's flexible semiconductors are put to a wide range of uses including in trackable packaging, within wearable health monitors and in pharmaceutical authentication systems. Bosses have their eye on a future $50bn global market with Pragmatic suggesting the chips could be embedded in just about any object.

In recent days the Government has announced a º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Semiconductor Institute, backed with £1bn, which will act as a conduit between the Government, universities and manufacturers to build strength in º£½ÇÊÓÆµ production. It will help implement the National Semiconductor Strategy which includes support for identified British strengths in compound chips, design and research and development.