The unexpected decline in industrial production in May 2026 weakens European ambitions in terms of industrial sovereignty.
In May, industrial production in the euro zone fell by 0.2%, against an expected increase of 0.2%, and showed a drop of 1.2% year-on-year, according to Eurostat data published on Wednesday. This figure contrasts sharply with the consensus of economists polled by Reuters, who bet on an increase of 0.2% in May and a decline limited to 0.5% over one year. This poor performance comes as Brussels and several capitals have made industrial sovereignty the heart of their speeches, while praising a gradual restart of activity after the energy shock.
Taken in isolation, a decline of 0.2% could be seen as a statistical jolt. But it is part of a bumpy sequence: after a slump at the start of the year, the industry rebounded slightly in March and April, before plunging again in May, where the European institutions imagined a gradual normalization. This decline shows a persistent difficulty in returning to pre-crisis production volumes.
A weakened sector despite political ambitions
This gap between political discourse and industrial reality is precisely what weakens the promises of sovereignty. States have piled up the texts, European industrial strategy, national relocation plans, envelopes for green technologies, but the production data reveal a sector which remains vulnerable to demand shocks and costs, and which has not yet reconstituted a robust base.
Detailed Eurostat tables indicate that intermediate goods and durable consumer goods are dragging down production in May, while energy and capital goods are increasing. The 2026 curves show a seesaw industry, with no clear trend, where spring rebounds are not enough to erase the lows at the start of the year.
In countries where industry remains the main engine, Germany and Italy, the May decline rekindles the question of the real capacity of these economies to drive European growth. The 2026 growth projections are based on an assumption of stability of industrial activity that this type of surprise weakens.
At the same time, industrial production prices do not offer the respite that manufacturers were hoping for. In May, they only increased by 0.2% compared to April in the euro zone, after an increase of 0.7% in April, but remained up 5.9% over one year, according to Eurostat. The ex-factory cost remains significantly higher than in 2025, even though volumes are declining. This cocktail, declining production and still high prices, is permanently reducing margins. The temptation, therefore, is strong to postpone or split transition projects, at the risk of losing ground to American or Asian competitors.
A growing gap with the United States
In the background, the European trajectory shows an increasingly marked divergence from that of the United States. Rexecode points out that American industry rebounded faster and higher after the pandemic, when the euro zone is struggling to regain a sustained pace. This translates into negotiating power on value chains, attractiveness for investments and the ability to impose standards.
The European Union is multiplying the instruments, carbon border adjustment mechanism, texts on critical raw materials, regulations on semiconductors, but the industrial base which must make them credible remains unstable. The unexpected drop in May provides an additional argument to those who point out the distance between ambitions and reality: as long as European production does not anchor itself at a level and a pace comparable to those of its rivals, sovereignty will only remain a theoretical objective.
Already a difficult start to the year
This decline in May is part of a broader trend. In January 2026, industrial production in the euro zone fell by 0.8%, while economists were expecting an increase. Over one year, it fell by 0.6% in February. In April 2026, industrial production in the euro zone increased by 0.3%, a figure revised upwards from the first estimate to 0.1%, after 0.4% in March.