San Diego Union-Tribune

BIDEN SIGNS BILL TO BOOST U.S. CHIPS

Companies planning billions of dollars in new investment­s

- BY JENNY LEONARD & JORDAN FABIAN Leonard and Fabian write for Bloomberg News.

President Joe Biden signed into law a broad competitio­n bill Tuesday that includes about $52 billion to boost domestic semiconduc­tor research and developmen­t, calling it a “once-ina-generation investment in America itself.”

“We need to make these chips here in America to bring down everyday costs and create jobs,” Biden said at a signing ceremony for the Chips and Science Act on the White House South Lawn, joined by executives from U.S. semiconduc­tor firms and congressio­nal leaders.

Biden said he had visited the U.S. facility where Javelin missiles were made and said the bill would make the nation less reliant on other countries to provide the advanced chips needed for those weapons systems, as well as other products.

“Unfortunat­ely, we produce zero percent of these advanced chips and China is trying to move way ahead of us to manufactur­e these sophistica­ted chips as well,” Biden said.

“It’s no wonder the Chinese Communist Party actively lobbied U.S. business against this bill,” he said. “The United States must lead the world in the production of these advanced chips; this law will do exactly that.”

Spurred by the bill, U.S. semiconduc­tor companies are planning billions of dollars in new investment­s. Ahead of the signing, the White House announced

that Micron Technology will invest $40 billion in memorychip manufactur­ing and that San Diego-based Qualcomm is partnering with GlobalFoun­dries, which has a facility in New York state, in a $4.2 billion agreement to manufactur­e chips. Micron on Tuesday said its investment­s would create up to 40,000 jobs in sectors including constructi­on and manufactur­ing — well beyond the initial White House estimate of 8,000 — and it expects to receive funding through the semiconduc­tor bill.

Micron Chief Executive Officer Sanjay Mehrotra attended the signing, along with Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger, Lockheed Martin CEO Jim Taiclet, HP CEO

Enrique Lores and the CEO of Advanced Micro Devices, Lisa Su.

The chips bill is one in a slew of legislativ­e wins for the White House in recent weeks. Senate Democrats on Sunday passed a sweeping climate and spending bill — a slimmed-down version of Biden’s Build Back Better agenda — after lawmakers also approved veterans health and gun bills with bipartisan support.

Biden was joined at the signing by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

The legislatio­n passed the Senate in June 2021 but lingered in the House for months, and it took more

than a year to reconcile the two chambers’ versions. Some Senate Democrats had criticized the White House for not pushing the House and Pelosi to get the legislatio­n over the finish line sooner.

The chips bill is at the center of the Biden administra­tion’s effort to reduce dependence on Asian suppliers such as Taiwan and South Korea, whose homegrown companies are leading the market, and to address supply chain disruption­s and resulting price hikes for certain goods containing semiconduc­tors.

Biden’s team and lawmakers have stressed the national security implicatio­ns of the bill, saying it was vital to competing with and countering China.

A large chunk of the federal grant is expected to go to Intel, Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co. (TSMC) and South Korea’s Samsung Electronic­s, all of which are now building new chip fabricatio­n facilities worth tens of billions of dollars in the United States.

The bill also includes important caveats sought by Republican­s and China hawks: Companies that receive the funding have to promise not to increase their production of advanced chips in China.

It was a condition made by lawmakers and the White House and was included in the measure over the objection of some chipmakers. Intel, in particular, was lobbying hard against the prohibitio­ns. In late 2021, the American chipmaker wanted to increase production in China, but the plan was rejected by the Biden administra­tion.

While China’s chipmaking champion, Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp., can make chips that are more advanced than 28 nanometers, its technology is still at least six years behind industry leader TSMC.

Micron’s Mehrotra said earlier Tuesday that “today less than one in 50 chips, memory chips, in the world are produced in the U.S. With Micron’s commitment, it will enable us to produce one in 10 chips of the global memory consumptio­n here in the U.S.”

The legislatio­n “solidifies long-term technology and manufactur­ing leadership of America,” Mehrotra said on Bloomberg Television.

 ?? DEMETRIUS FREEMAN THE WASHINGTON POST ?? President Joe Biden signs the Chips and Science Act into law on Tuesday. The measure is part of a push to boost U.S. competitiv­eness over China.
DEMETRIUS FREEMAN THE WASHINGTON POST President Joe Biden signs the Chips and Science Act into law on Tuesday. The measure is part of a push to boost U.S. competitiv­eness over China.

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