Las Vegas Review-Journal

Administra­tion releases plan for $50B investment in chips

- By Ana Swanson

WASHINGTON — The Department of Commerce on Tuesday unveiled its plan for dispensing $50 billion aimed at building up the domestic semiconduc­tor industry and countering China, in what is expected to be the biggest U.S. government effort in decades to shape a strategic industry.

About $28 billion of the so-called CHIPS for America Fund is expected to go toward grants and loans to help build facilities for making, assembling and packaging some of the world’s more advanced chips.

Another $10 billion will be devoted to expanding manufactur­ing for older generation­s of technology used in cars and communicat­ions technology, as well as specialty technologi­es and other industry suppliers, while $11 billion will go toward research and developmen­t initiative­s related to the industry.

The department is aiming to begin soliciting applicatio­ns for the funding from companies no later than February, and it could begin disbursing money by next spring, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said in an interview.

The fund, which was approved by Congress in July, was created to encourage U.S. production of strategica­lly important semiconduc­tors and spur research and developmen­t into the next generation of chip technologi­es. The Biden administra­tion says the investment­s will lessen dependence on a foreign supply chain that has become an urgent threat to the country’s national security.

“This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y, a once-in-a-generation opportunit­y, to secure our national security and revitalize American manufactur­ing and revitalize American innovation and research and developmen­t,” Raimondo said. “So, although we’re working with urgency, we have to get it right, and that’s why we are laying out the strategy now.”

Trade experts have called the fund the most significan­t investment in industrial policy that the United States has made in at least 50 years.

It will come at a pivotal moment for the semiconduc­tor industry.

Tensions between the United States and China are rising over Taiwan, the self-governing island that is the source of more than two-thirds of the most advanced

semiconduc­tors. Shortages of semiconduc­tors have also helped to fuel inflation globally, by increasing delivery times and prices for electronic­s, appliances and cars.

Semiconduc­tors are crucial components in mobile phones, pacemakers and coffee makers, and they are also the key to advanced technologi­es such as quantum computing, artificial intelligen­ce and unmanned drones.

With midterm elections fast approachin­g, the Biden administra­tion is under pressure to demonstrat­e that it can use this funding wisely and lure manufactur­ing investment­s back to the United States. The Commerce Department is responsibl­e for choosing which companies receive the money and monitoring their investment­s.

In its strategy paper, the Commerce Department said that the United States remained the global leader in chip design, but that it had lost its leading edge in producing the world’s most advanced semiconduc­tors. In the past few years, China has accounted for a substantia­l portion of newly built manufactur­ing, the paper said.

The high cost of building the kind of complex facilities that manufactur­e semiconduc­tors, called fabs, has pushed companies to separate their facilities for designing chips from those that manufactur­e them. Many leading companies, such as Qualcomm, Nvidia and Apple, design chips in the United States, but they contract out their fabricatio­n to foundries based in Asia, particular­ly in Taiwan. The system creates a risky source of dependence for the chips industry, the White House says.

The department said the funding aimed to help offset the higher costs of building and operating facilities in the United States compared with other countries, and to encourage companies to build the larger type of fabs in the United States that are now more common in Asia. Domestic and foreign companies can apply for the funds, as long as they invest in projects in the United States.

To receive the money, companies will need to demonstrat­e the long-term economic viability of their project, as well as “spillover benefits” for the communitie­s they operate in, such as investment­s in infrastruc­ture and workforce developmen­t, or their ability to attract suppliers and customers, the department said.

Projects that involve economical­ly disadvanta­ged individual­s and businesses owned by minorities, veterans or women, or that are based in rural areas, will be prioritize­d, the department said. So will projects that help make the supply chain more secure by, for example providing another production location for advanced chips that are manufactur­ed in Taiwan. Companies are encouraged to demonstrat­e that they can obtain other sources of funding, including private capital and state and local investment.

The Commerce Department is setting up two new offices housed under the National Institute of Standards and Technology to set up the programs.

One of the department’s biggest challenges will be ensuring that the government funds add to, rather than displace, money that chipmaking companies were already planning to invest. Companies including Globalfoun­dries, Micron, Qualcomm and Intel have announced plans to make major investment­s in U.S. facilities that may qualify for government funding.

The chips bill specifies that companies that accept funding cannot make new, high-tech investment­s in China or other “countries of concern” for at least a decade, unless they are producing lower-tech “legacy chips” destined to serve only the local market.

The Commerce Department said it would review and audit companies that receive the funding, and claw back funds from any company that violates the rules. The guidelines also forbid recipients from engaging in stock buybacks, so that taxpayer money doesn’t end up being used to reward a company’s investors.

“We’re going to run a serious, competitiv­e, transparen­t process,” Raimondo said. “We are negotiatin­g for every nickel of taxpayer money.”

In addition to the new prohibitio­ns on investing in chip manufactur­ing facilities in China, officials in the Biden administra­tion have agreed that the White House should take executive action to scrutinize outbound investment in other industries as well, Raimondo said.

But she said that the administra­tion was still working through the details of how to put such a policy in place.

Earlier versions of the chips bill also proposed setting up a broader system to review investment­s that U.S. companies make abroad to prevent certain strategic technologi­es from being shared with U.S. adversarie­s. That provision, which would have applied to cutting edge technologi­es beyond the chips sector, was stripped out of the bill, but officials in the Biden administra­tion have been considerin­g an executive order that would establish a similar review process.

The United States has a review system for investment­s that foreign companies make in the United States, but not vice versa.

The Biden administra­tion has also taken steps to restrict the types of advanced semiconduc­tors and equipment that can be exported out of the United States.

In statements last week, Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, both based in Silicon Valley, said they had been notified by the U.S. government that exports to China and Russia of certain high-end chips they produce for use in supercompu­ters and artificial intelligen­ce were now restricted. These chips help power the kind of supercompu­ters that can be used in weapons developmen­t and intelligen­ce gathering, including large-scale surveillan­ce.

Raimondo declined to discuss the export controls in detail but said the department was “constantly evaluating” its efforts, including how best to work with allies to deny China the equipment, software and tooling the country uses to enhance its semiconduc­tor industry.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden’s Department of Commerce on Tuesday unveiled its plan to disperse $50 billion to build up the nation’s semiconduc­tor industry. Here, Biden attends an event in March in Washington to support legislatio­n that would encourage domestic manufactur­ing and strengthen supply chains for computer chips.
PATRICK SEMANSKY / ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden’s Department of Commerce on Tuesday unveiled its plan to disperse $50 billion to build up the nation’s semiconduc­tor industry. Here, Biden attends an event in March in Washington to support legislatio­n that would encourage domestic manufactur­ing and strengthen supply chains for computer chips.

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