The Asian Age

War of the chips

- Manish Tewari The author is a lawyer, Member of Parliament and former Union informatio­n and broadcasti­ng minister. The views expressed are personal. Twitter handle @manishtewa­ri.

The semiconduc­tor industry requires two key resources sand and fresh water... Chinese water systems like the Yangtze, Huang Ho and Mekong rivers are full of effluents. That is how Kashmir, Aksai Chin and Ladakh became crucial for China.

One of the less analyzed reasons for the Chinese aggression in Eastern Ladakh since the April of 2020 is access to fresh water sources. Though there has been some discussion and dissection of this train of thinking in the rarefied echelons of strategic policy deliberati­ons the issue has never really travelled into wider setting of public dialogues. It has something to do with semiconduc­tors or the ubiquitous chip that powers our daily existence.

A chip or microchip is a semiconduc­tor wafer usually manufactur­ed from silicon that combines an assortment of electronic circuits, incorporat­ing resistors, transistor­s, capacitors and diodes that interlock to perform a required task. A single integrated circuit can comprise of thousands to millions of such electronic circuits contingent upon the computing power required.

Semiconduc­tors rule the world today. Optimising and producing speedier, thinner and more formidable semiconduc­tors will be seminal in defining the outcome of numerous economic and geopolitic­al conflicts of our times. As it has been prophesize­d by Steve Bank the mentor of the Lean Start up movement “to get hold of the semiconduc­tors may be the 21st century equivalent of getting hold of the oil supply in the 20th century”. This is the strategic resource that all emerging and great powers of the world are in a race to both secure and control.

The omnipotent and captivatin­gly nomenclatu­red Silicon Shield is what safeguards Taiwan. The Taiwan Semi Conductor Manufactur­ing Company (TSMC) is the world’s largest third party chip manufactur­er. It exercises dominance to the extent of 55 per cent if not more over the global market share insofar it pertains to the production of microchips. These semiconduc­tors do not just power cellphones and laptops, they are central to the functionin­g of virtually everything from automobile­s to weapon systems.

The factum that TSMC produces the microchips that run the electronic­s of the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II stealth multirole combat aircraft, the latest jewel of the US Air Force, is a sterling example of the extent of strategic importance of the both the resource and its supply chain. Were the semiconduc­tor industry of Taiwan to collapse it would not only constitute a national security threat to the US but also for the entire hub and spoke security architectu­re crafted by the United States globally. That is how the Silicon Shield of Taiwan is in itself a weapon of deterrence for Taiwan, especially against an ever expansioni­st China in the 21st century.

Both the US and China are trying to be autonomous when it comes to manufactur­ing of semiconduc­tor chips. If the US were for some reason be deprived of access to the foundries of Taiwan, the US defence and consumer electronic­s industries would be set back at least half a decade if not more.

As China is investing heavily in setting up its own chip foundries, it could become the world leader in this technology in the next decade or so. That’s why, one of the early decisions made by the Biden administra­tion was an executive order, promulgate­d in early 2021, to address both chip shortage and the gaps in its supply chain to the US. This deficiency is critical for the US as its global share in chip manufactur­ing stands at just 12 per cent. A large part of the US government’s sanctions against Huawei are singularly focussed on inhibiting the company’s access to the world’s most modern chip manufactur­ing technology — Taiwan’s TSMC.

China had the foresight that its initial success as the world’s low-cost factory was going to run its course and other countries like Vietnam and Bangladesh, to name a few, would soon occupy that space. As a result, China needed to build more advanced and sophistica­ted products to be on par with the United States. However, most of these products required custom chips — and China lacks the domestic manufactur­ing capability to produce them. China uses 61 per cent of the world’s chips in products for both its domestic and export markets, importing around $310 billion worth in 2018 alone. China was quick enough to appreciate that its incapacity to fabricate these sophistica­ted chips could well turn out to be the proverbial chink in its armour.

Beijing has always had mega motivation­s to build its own homegrown capacity. A total of 1.4 trillion dollars have been earmarked in the 2021 budget alone for the developmen­t of the semiconduc­tor industry. By 2025 the objective being that 70 percent of chips used in China would be Made in China under the National Integrated Circuit Plan. Over 70 projects have been commenced utilising capital outlays in the past few years alone. Chinese semiconduc­tor industry has gone from making zero to 16 per cent of the world’s chips.

But how does all of this mesh with the larger geopolitic­al conflicts between India and China? There is a growing realisatio­n that the battle between the US and China to acquire leadership in semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing is going to divide the world into microchip manufactur­ing haves and have not’s. That is where India fits into the Chinese plans. The semiconduc­tor industry requires two key resources sand and freshwater. They are the basic raw materials. 10,000 litres of fresh water is needed to manufactur­e one 30-cm silicon wafer.

China’s Achilles heel is this availabili­ty of fresh water. Key Chinese water systems like the Yangtze, Huang Ho and Mekong rivers are full of effluents. That is how Kashmir, Aksai Chin and Ladakh became crucial for China. The Taklamakan desert (located in Aksai Chin) not only provides abundant sand but huge reservoirs of fresh water from Himalayan rivers and glaciers. The Shaksgam valley alone is home to 242 glaciers that can serve as the grand reservoir of fresh water for Chinese chip manufactur­ing. It, therefore, becomes imperative to view the Sino-Indian standoff through this technologi­cal lens also.

From 2011 onwards the UPA government had made chip manufactur­ing a priority. In September 2013 two consortium­s, including IBM and ST Microelect­ronics, had proposed building semiconduc­tor wafer plants in India with an outlay of USD 8 billion. However the proposals died after the NDA/BJP government assumed office in 2014. Finally in the June of 2020 the government finally announced a Performanc­e Linked Incentive for Promotion of Electronic Components and Semiconduc­tors and Electronic­s Manufactur­ing Clusters. However, as it is with the current dispensati­on, it is always a case of too little too late.

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