Albany Times Union

Vision for chip sector growth

Capital Region vies for federal manufactur­ing funds

- By Larry Rulison

Fab 8.2 may be only just the beginning.

A push by President Joe Biden to get Congress to approve a $37 billion federal subsidy program aimed at bolstering the domestic computer chip manufactur­ing sector against Asian competitio­n could help Globalfoun­dries pay to build a second chip factory at the company’s Fab 8 campus in Malta.

But it could also help the state’s Albany Nanotech complex on the

SUNY Polytechni­c Institute campus land a new federal computer chip research lab called the National Semiconduc­tor Technology Center that would be the envy of the nation.

The end result could mean billions of dollars in federal, state and corporate semiconduc­tor industry investment pouring into the Capital Region and other parts of upstate over the next decade.

“It’s a perfect fit,” said Doug Grose, president of NY CREATES, the nonprofit entity that oversees

the state-supported chip industry research operations at SUNY Poly and affiliated sites across upstate.

Grose said that the NY CREATES advisory board, whose members come from a variety of industry and academic background­s, will meet next Monday to discuss the best way to try and land the National Semiconduc­tor Technology Center.

“We could start at time zero,” Grose said, noting that Albany Nanotech is already considered the most advanced computer chip research center in the country with available chip production lines that could be expanded as needed.

“It would be phased in over time,” Grose said.

Biden’s $37 billion computer chip manufactur­ing initiative was started under the Trump administra­tion in response to China’s growing influence in the computer chip industry at the expense of the United States. The idea of China controllin­g key aspects of the semiconduc­tor industry’s supply chain and manufactur­ing output has worried the Defense Department for years as the U.S.

chip industry has consolidat­ed and outsourced more and more of its production overseas.

The coronaviru­s pandemic, which has disrupted the global supply chain for chips, triggering a ripple effect on the auto industry and others, has only made the issue more pressing.

Globalfoun­dries, which employs 3,000 people at its Fab 8 chip factory in Malta, would be a likely beneficiar­y of the $37 billion fund that Biden is pitching Congress.

Globalfoun­dries CEO Tom Caulfield recently told Reuters that Globalfoun­dries

would seriously consider building a second chip factory in Malta if Congress approves the program, which was originally spelled out — but not financed — in the Defense Department budget bill passed by Congress just before Trump left office in January.

The program was originally proposed by U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer, D -N.Y., the Senate majority

leader, under a bill called the CHIPS Act. That measure was eventually rolled into the Defense Department spending bill, although technicall­y Congress must still approve the spending, which would provide subsidies to companies like Globalfoun­dries to build new U.S. production facilities and launch the federal chip research lab.

“It’s not a question of if,” Caulfield told Reuters for a story earlier this month. “It’s just a question of when. And a key element of going forward will be the funding of the

CHIPS Act.”

Computer chip factories today cost between $10 billion and $15 billion. Globalfoun­dries spent nearly $1 million during the last three months of 2020 lobbying Congress and the Trump administra­tion on the CHIPS Act and other initiative­s.

Grose said the National Semiconduc­tor Technology Center would attract billions in federal, state and industry investment, which would make it far larger than any previous research labs created at the SUNY Poly campus. It would also likely involve a computer chip packaging center that NY CREATES operates in Rochester if New York was awarded the center.

Just last week, U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo met with representa­tives from the Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n, whose membership includes Globalfoun­dries and other chip companies, to update them on Biden’s plans.

“I believe we need to make strong investment­s in domestic manufactur­ing, research and workforce, and help strengthen America’s global leadership in semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing and innovation,” Raimondo said. “This is the beginning of what I believe will be an ongoing dialog between the Department of Commerce and industry leaders as we find innovative ways to invest in domestic manufactur­ing.”

The hope that Globalfoun­dries will land some of the CHIPS Act funding has already bolstered optimism in Saratoga County, where Fab 8 is located, said Shelby Schneider, president of the Saratoga County Prosperity Partnershi­p, an economic developmen­t group.

“That’s really exciting.” Schneider said.

 ?? Michael P. Farrell / Times Union archive ?? A $37 billion federal program could help the Albany Nanotech complex on the SUNY Polytechni­c Institute campus land a new research lab.
Michael P. Farrell / Times Union archive A $37 billion federal program could help the Albany Nanotech complex on the SUNY Polytechni­c Institute campus land a new research lab.
 ?? Photo courtesy of Globalfoun­dries ?? Globalfoun­dries, which employs 3,000 people at its Fab 8 chip factory in Malta, would be a likely beneficiar­y of the $37 billion fund that President Joe Biden is pitching to Congress.
Photo courtesy of Globalfoun­dries Globalfoun­dries, which employs 3,000 people at its Fab 8 chip factory in Malta, would be a likely beneficiar­y of the $37 billion fund that President Joe Biden is pitching to Congress.
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CAULFIELD

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