The Denver Post

The global effort to make an American microchip

- By Ana Swanson and Lazaro Gamio

Semiconduc­tors are vital to the modern economy, powering everything from video games and cars to supercompu­ters and weapons systems. The Biden administra­tion is investing $39 billion to help companies build more factories in the United States to bring more of this supply chain back home.

But even after U.S. facilities are built, chip manufactur­ing will remain decidedly global.

The internatio­nal journey of one kind of chip, made by American semiconduc­tor manufactur­er Onsemi and used to power electric vehicles, demonstrat­es how difficult it will be to decouple from East Asia and other regions that dominate the chip market.

The first steps for making this particular semiconduc­tor, known as a silicon carbide chip, happen in a factory in New Hampshire. The chip ends up in cars driven on American roads and elsewhere. But in between, the process will depend on raw materials, machinery and intellectu­al property from dozens of foreign suppliers and factories.

The first computer chips were invented in the United States, but by the late 1960s parts of the supply chain began to move overseas as companies looked to save costs. With the help of generous subsidies, Asian companies eventually began to manufactur­e chips that were cheaper and more advanced than those made in the West.

America’s share of world chip manufactur­ing has fallen to just 12% today from 37% in 1990, according to industry figures.

The United States is trying to win back more chip production to make its supply chains more resilient, and avoid the kind of expensive and economical­ly damaging shortages of semiconduc­tors seen during the pandemic. But with other countries also continuing to spend heavily on their chip industries, American investment­s — as big as they are — will go only so far to change the global picture.

One 2020 study by the Boston Consulting Group and the Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n estimated that an infusion of $50 billion would increase the American share of manufactur­ing to 13% or 14% by 2030, helping the United States to hold on to at least a portion of the global market.

Without the funding, the U.S. share would fall to 10%, the study said.

For the most cuttingedg­e chips, including those that are helping to power a boom in artificial intelligen­ce, U.S. officials now say that new investment­s will put the country on track to produce roughly 20% of the world’s leading-edge logic chips by the end of the decade.

Still, chip and electronic­s production is likely to be centered in Asia for the foreseeabl­e future, Moody’s Analytics said in a recent report.

Tech companies are under intense competitiv­e pressure to keep costs down while innovating, meaning they are driven to work with most skilled manufactur­ers in Asia, said Chance Finley, Onsemi’s vice president of global supply chains.

The incredible cost of chip manufactur­ing facilities — which range from $5 billion to $20 billion to build, more than a nuclear power plant — encourages domestic chipmakers to outsource manufactur­ing to foreign facilities rather than build their own, he said. Chips also happen to be small and light, which makes them easy to move around the world.

Onsemi is looking to the new U.S. investment­s in the chip industry to help it grow, and yet considerin­g sites in the United States, the Czech Republic and in South Korea for a $2 billion expansion.

Many stages of Onsemi’s manufactur­ing process are done in house. That is somewhat unusual for chip companies, which often outsource certain production stages. Other chip supply chains are different, but no less internatio­nal. Many run through Taiwan, which produces more than 60% of the world’s chips, and more than 90% of the most advanced chips.

One 2020 study by the Global Semiconduc­tor Alliance and Accenture found that chips and their components could cross internatio­nal borders 70 times or more before reaching the final consumer, traveling more than 25,000 miles in the process.

Another study by the Boston Consulting Group and the Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n looked at creating a self-sufficient chip supply chain in the United States, and estimated it would take $1 trillion and sharply increase prices for chips and products made with them.

“The idea that we’ll be somehow self-sufficient, that is not realistic,” said Bindiya Vakil, the CEO of Resilinc, which maps supply chains for the semiconduc­tor and other industries. “We are part of this global supply chain, whether we like it or not.”

 ?? ?? A worker sits in a mining winch operations room at the Energy Fuels Inc. uranium Pinyon Plain Mine on Jan. 31near Tusayan, Ariz. The largest uranium producer in the United States is ramping up work just south of Grand Canyon National Park on a long-contested project that largely has sat dormant since the 1980s.
A worker sits in a mining winch operations room at the Energy Fuels Inc. uranium Pinyon Plain Mine on Jan. 31near Tusayan, Ariz. The largest uranium producer in the United States is ramping up work just south of Grand Canyon National Park on a long-contested project that largely has sat dormant since the 1980s.

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