Santa Cruz Sentinel

Kamala Harris visits Silicon Valley

$4 billion project to include room size of three football fields

- By Ethan Baron

Vice President Kamala Harris visited Silicon Valley's Applied Materials on Monday to highlight White House support for the company's just-announced $4 billion project in Sunnyvale to speed developmen­t of advanced computer chips, help rebuild the lagging U.S semiconduc­tor industry and make the U.S. less dependent on foreignmad­e chips.

Harris, speaking to an audience of hundreds of technology industry workers and leaders at a company campus in Sunnyvale, said new federal incentives created by the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act enabled the Applied Materials project. Harris did not specify what incentives the Santa Clara-based company, which makes chip-manufactur­ing equipment, is to receive.

“As indispensa­ble as semiconduc­tors are today, they will be come even more important in the future,” the East Bay native said, citing the technology's role in solar and wind power technology, satellite networks for high-speed internet, and artificial intelligen­ce applicatio­ns in medicine and agricultur­e.

The White House has frequently tapped Harris for technology-related jobs. She met earlier this month with industry CEOs and has warned of risks from generative AI. In August, she visited the Chabot Space and Science Center in Oakland to promote the U.S. space industry, after in December convening the Biden administra­tion's first National Space Council meeting.

The CHIPS and Science Act directs $280 billion in spending over the next decade, with $200 billion for commercial­ization and research and developmen­t, and $53 billion for semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing, R&D and workforce developmen­t, plus $24 billion in tax credits for chip making.

The silicon chip, the technology that gave this region its name, is today made mostly overseas. Harris' visit to her home state reflects the White House's push to reverse the decline in U.S. chip making, to

support national security, the economy and the nation's tech industries. The U.S., once a major player in chip making with 37% of the world's production in the '90s, now makes 12%, according to an October report from consultanc­y firm McKinsey & Company, which has projected the size of the semiconduc­tor market at $1 trillion by 2030. Pandemic-related supply chain snafus, particular­ly of the chips used in cars, highlighte­d the perils for the U.S. of heavy reliance on overseas-made semiconduc­tors.

Applied Materials, along with Lam Research in Fremont and KLA Corporatio­n in Milpitas, is among the world's top chip-making equipment manufactur­ers, and chip-design titans Nvidia, Apple and Google keep Silicon Valley at the forefront of chip developmen­t, even as the manufactur­ing has largely moved overseas.

Silicon Valley companies are “the global leaders in semiconduc­tor design,” said Sean Randolph, senior director of the Bay Area Council Economic Institute.

Applied Materials' project, though not making semiconduc­tors, will help build up domestic chip making by “leveraging the expertise here in the Bay Area to accelerate the manufactur­ing process in the U.S. and globally with our partners,” Randolph said.

Harris' visit comes a day after China banned chips from Idaho-based manufactur­er Micron, and as U.S. tech and political leaders fret that China's threatenin­g behavior toward Taiwan could lead to disruption of chip flow from Taiwan, which makes most of the world's chips, and nearly all the most sophistica­ted ones.

The new Applied Materials “EPIC” facility, slated for completion in early 2026, with the $4 billion spent over seven years, is to include a sterile room bigger than three football fields where chipmakers can have a dedicated space to work with “next-generation technologi­es and tools,” and university researcher­s can collaborat­e with chip-industry profession­als, Applied Materials said.

“By investing in manufactur­ing capacity we will create a more resilient supply chain,” CEO Gary Dickerson told the crowd assembled under and around a large tent on a company campus in Sunnyvale.

Applied Materials said it expected building the facility to employ up to 1,500 constructi­on workers, and that EPIC would create up to 2,000 new engineerin­g jobs, and potentiall­y thousands more in related industries.

The amount the company intends to spend will depend on what level of federal support it receives via the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act, it said. Applied Materials last year received a $30 million grant from California intended to help the firm obtain CHIPS Act funding.

Quickly advancing artificial intelligen­ce and the transition to cleaner energy are among tech industry trends that will accelerate chip demand in coming years, said Prabu Raja, president of Applied Materials' semiconduc­tor products group.

The bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act, enacted in August, has spurred major investment announceme­nts by companies expecting to benefit. Micron, anticipati­ng “grants and credits made possible” by the act, said in August it would spend $40 billion through 2029 to build up memory-chip manufactur­ing in the U.S. Also in August, semiconduc­tor firms GlobalFoun­dries, until recently based in Santa Clara and now headquarte­red in New York, and Qualcomm of San Diego announced a multi-billion dollar partnershi­p to make chips in GlobalFoun­dry's New York plant.

Iconic Santa Clara chip maker Intel is working to complete a deal announced last year to buy Israeli semiconduc­tor maker Tower Semiconduc­tor, which owns factories in Newport Beach and San Antonio, Texas, as well as in Japan and Israel.

“The spirit of innovation, dare I say, is central to who we are,” Harris told the crowd gathered Monday. “As a proud daughter of California, I believe there are few places where that spirit burns brighter than right here in Silicon Valley.”

 ?? DAI SUGANO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Vice President Kamala Harris acknowledg­es attendees before delivering remarks on the implementa­tion of the federal CHIPS and Science Act, which directs $280billion in spending over the next decade to support tech innovation and domestic semiconduc­tor research and production on May 22at Applied Materials in Sunnyvale.
DAI SUGANO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Vice President Kamala Harris acknowledg­es attendees before delivering remarks on the implementa­tion of the federal CHIPS and Science Act, which directs $280billion in spending over the next decade to support tech innovation and domestic semiconduc­tor research and production on May 22at Applied Materials in Sunnyvale.

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