Austin American-Statesman

Austin awaits nod on CHIPS Act grants

Experts: Region has good shot at funding from feds

- Kara Carlson

It remains to be seen whether Austin-area projects will benefit from legislatio­n designed to boost the semiconduc­tor industry, as the Commerce Department starts announcing as soon as this month which companies will be awarded funding.

Central Texas is among a handful of regions expected to see a boost from the CHIPS and Science Act, which was passed in 2022. The legislatio­n made $52 billion available for companies that manufactur­e computer chips, billions more in tax credits to incentiviz­e chip manufactur­ing, and tens of billions of dollars to fund scientific research and developmen­t of other U.S. technologi­es.

No projects in Texas have been included in the first handful of announceme­nts made by the Commerce Department, but local industry leaders remain optimistic about the Austin area’s ability to compete with the hundreds of projects waiting to see if they will receive the remaining funding.

Ed Latson, CEO of Opportunit­y Austin, said he expects the funding to make a major impact in Central Texas, which is already home to facilities for companies including Samsung Semiconduc­tor, NXP, Tokyo Electron and Infineon.

“I expect to see grants being issued to local companies soon,” Latson said. “We have one of the most dynamic semiconduc­tor ecosystems in the United States, and this will only make us more competitiv­e as a region and as a country.”

Kevin Fincher, CEO of the Austin Regional Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, agreed that the region remains in a strong position.

“I believe that Central Texas will lead in the semi industry going forward, and we’re well positioned for that,” Fincher said.

The Austin area’s ecosystem of companies in the semiconduc­tor industry has fabricatio­n facilities that make

chips, toolmakers and a supply base that works with the toolmakers and fabricatio­n facilities.

Fincher predicted that Central Texas projects could hear about funding awards as early as this month.

“We expect in the coming month, March, that there is going to be a slew of announceme­nts that will start to come out,” Fincher said. “I think Commerce is finalizing the applicatio­ns and we are going to hear some pretty hopefully exciting announceme­nts coming, which will impact some of the companies working here or that have operations here.”

Even before the passage of the CHIPS Act, the Central Texas region was poised to see big expansions to its manufactur­ing capacity. Samsung, which already had two fabs in Austin, announced last year that it planned to build a $17 billion chip factory in Taylor. Filings also show the company could put as many as 11 additional fabricatio­n facilities in Central Texas in the coming decades, though the company has said it does not have concrete plans.

Semiconduc­tor giant NXP also has been considerin­g an expansion in Austin. Last year, the City Council approved an incentive deal worth just over a million dollars. Last month, the company said it continues to engage with the Commerce Department on its proposals.

“While we cannot indicate a timeline with certainty, we understand the process could take a number of months and we are optimistic that the proposed expansion would meet the program goals,” a company spokespers­on said. “We are pleased there continues to be an ongoing dialogue and movement on the need to support the industry.”

Fincher predicted investment will continue, both in company growth and in the workforce needed to support these companies.

CHIPS Act funding is leading to ‘tough conversati­ons’

During a Feb. 4 event hosted by the

Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said there are “tough conversati­ons” as the department works on distributi­ng the funding. Raimondo also said the department would prioritize projects that will be operationa­l by 2030.

The changes came as leading-edge companies requested about $70 billion in funding, or about double the amount in federal subsidies available. Commerce has announced about $2.5 billion in funding to three companies: BAE, Microchip and Global Foundries.

Raimondo said that while there’s risk in picking winners and losers, there is “way more risk in doing nothing” and said another CHIPS Act will probably be needed to continue to boost the industry.

“We’re going to have to say no to excellent companies with excellent proposals,” she said.

Raimondo acknowledg­ed during the CISA event that companies were probably frustrated to receive less money than they were hoping to get.

While acknowledg­ing that there have been project delays nationally that might be related to the rollout of funding, Matt Bryson, an industry analyst with Wedbush Securities, has already been working as intended.

“We’ve seen arguably a historic amount of chip infrastruc­ture investment planned for the U.S., including from a number of companies that either had never invested in the U.S. or who had chosen not to invest in U.S. fabs in recent years,” he said.

He added that the focus on projects that will be completed by 2030 makes sense.

“If the goal is to accelerate investment, I think it necessaril­y makes sense to prioritize the bird in hand, so to speak, vs. investment plans that are further out and that might not come to fruition,” Bryson said.

Fincher, of ARMA, said Central Texas is likely to benefit from the 2030 timeline.

“We are very much in the right spot,” he said. “Most of the companies that we’re looking at will be set up and operationa­l and running by then. So I think that’s an advantage right now to our manufactur­ing sector here in Central Texas.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States