AMSTERDAM, May 5 (Reuters) – Europe’s AI regulations should be reduced and simplified, chief executives of ‌seven of Europe’s top technology firms including ‌Christophe Fouquet of the biggest, computer chip equipment maker ASML, ​said in an opinion piece published on Tuesday.

The European Union resumes talks this month on streamlining the bloc’s 2024 AI Act, with the European Commission, ‌the bloc’s executive arm, ⁠also due to present its “Tech Sovereignty Package” on May 27 — including plans still ⁠under negotiation to support the computer chip industry and AI infrastructure.

“More than three years after the ‘ChatGPT moment’, ​Europe ​is still debating regulation, ​while others have long ‌shifted focus to scaling AI in physical systems and robotics,” the executives wrote in the op-ed.

The commentary, published in newspapers including Germany’s Handelsblatt and Italy’s Corriere della Sera, also called for stronger industrial ‌policy, and M&A rules that ​would allow European companies to ​grow.

“We face fragmented ​markets and subsidized rivals with very ‌strong market penetration in the ​EU,” the executives ​wrote.

It was signed by the CEOs of ASML, Airbus , Ericsson, Mistral AI, Nokia,, SAP AG ​and Siemens, ‌and followed a meeting with European Commission President ​Ursula von der Leyen.

(Reporting by Toby Sterling, ​Editing by William Maclean)