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What happens when the rule book is no longer useful, or worse, was never written in the first place? In today’s fast-moving electronics landscape, we’re increasingly asked to design and build what has no precedent, no proven path, and no tidy checklist to follow. This is where “Design for Invention” begins.
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Building PCBs and Policy in Europe: Group ACB Champions Advocacy, Standards Development, and Technical Leadership
October 30, 2025 | Linda Stepanich, Community MagazineEstimated reading time: 1 minute
How does a European PCB manufacturer navigate the competitive manufacturing landscape in Europe? By participating in standards development committee meetings, testifying before the European Commission on industry issues, and sponsoring hand-soldering competitions in the region.
Group ACB, based in France and Belgium, focuses on high-reliability applications. The 37-year-old company is also active in the Global Electronics Association, giving credit for helping ACB to raise awareness of electronics manufacturing in Europe.
“In fact, our largest PCB plant is in Belgium,” says Joachim Verhegge, plant director. “It is convenient that we are close to Brussels because the decision-making happens in Brussels.”
Kevin Tastets, group sales director, agrees. “In the U.S., you have the CHIPS Act, and we have set up the same thing in Europe with the European Chips Act,” he says. “The Association is very active in this, and since we are a key player in the supply chain in Europe, this is a critical issue for us. We advocate for the industry by telling the European Commission that we need a supply chain in Europe, we need some players, and some independent supply for critical projects. During COVID-19, for example, when we had a shortage of respirators, the politicians discovered what happens when you depend on another continent.”
Advocacy at the EU Level: Making PCBs Visible in Brussels
PCB fabricators have learned they needed to raise a common voice for Europe, “because we are not too organized on a national level,” Kevin says. “For example, there is the French Association, the Italian Association, the German Association, and the UK— even if they are not part of the European Union they are still part of the European continent—and the Global Electronics Association can have a voice to speak for all the countries.”
Continue reading this article in the Fall 2025 issue of Community Magazine.
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Global Electronics Association Expands Free Member Training Library with New Safety and Ergonomics Courses
04/23/2026 | Global Electronics AssociationThe Global Electronics Association today announced three new complimentary courses in safety and ergonomics, expanding its member training library to help manufacturers onboard workers faster and improve production performance.
India’s Vasantha Advanced Systems: EMS Success for 30 Years
04/22/2026 | Marcy LaRont, I-Connect007Based in one of India’s premier manufacturing regions, Vasantha Advanced Systems is an EMS provider that has built a reputation for quality, reliability, and long-term customer partnerships, earning repeated recognition from the Indian government through its National MSME Awards. Now, with a full spectrum of capabilities spanning PCB assembly, box build, and wire harness, and a workforce of more than 500, Vasantha is expanding its presence into the U.S. market. At APEX EXPO, I met Dr. Chidambaranathan and learned how this rising global player is positioning itself to meet the evolving needs of North American customers.
New Guidance Targets Scope 3.1 Emissions Gap in Electronics Supply Chains
04/22/2026 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamA new industry guidance document aimed at improving how electronics companies account for Scope 3 Category 1 (Scope 3.1) emissions marks a significant step toward more consistent and effective supply chain decarbonization. A recent webinar hosted by the Global Electronics Association and the Responsible Business Alliance (RBA) addressed a persistent challenge: Despite the material impact of Scope 3.1 emissions, fewer than half of electronics companies currently report them.
EDIP Opens the Door: EU Funding Now Available for Defence Electronics Including PCBs and Substrates
04/21/2026 | Alison James and Chris Mitchell, Global Electronics AssociationThe European Commission has published a call for proposals under the European Defence Industry Programme (EDIP), and for European electronics manufacturers the message is clear: this is real money for real capacity, and PCBs and IC substrates are explicitly in scope. EDIP's Industrial Reinforcement Actions (IRA) dedicate €122.25 million to key electronic components, covering guidance electronics, propulsion electronics, RF and laser modules, multispectral cameras, avionics, PCBs and IC substrates, lithium-ion polymer batteries, power electronics, and critical semiconductor building blocks
The Right Approach: The End of an Era—DoD Proposes MIL-PRF-31032 Cancellation
04/21/2026 | Steve Williams -- Column: The Right ApproachThe Defense Logistics Agency has initiated formal proceedings to cancel the military's primary performance specification for printed circuit boards, a move that could reshape how the U.S. defense industrial base qualifies and sources one of its most critical electronic components. On March 4, 2026, DLA Weapons Support issued a memorandum to military and industry coordination activities announcing that MIL-PRF-31032, along with its six associated specification sheets, has been proposed for cancellation. A 30-day comment period was allotted, with concurrence or comments due by April 3, 2026.