The US government is soon to begin awarding up to $52 billion in subsidies for domestic semiconductor manufacturing. The funding is a part of the CHIPS and Science Act that President Joe Biden signed into law in August 2022. But before the funds are given, the US Commerce Department is introducing rules to ensure beneficiaries of the funding don't spend it elsewhere, and it particularly doesn't want it feeding back to China.
According to a report by Reuters, the proposal seeks to prevent recipients of funding from funneling money into 'countries of concern' such as Russia and China. A company with a global reach could theoretically engage in research or development of sensitive semiconductors in countries the US does not want to be sharing with.
The measures seek to restrict sensitive technologies from falling into the wrong hands. This includes quantum computing and AI technology, radiation hardened chips and communications equipment that could be used for things like missiles and drones.
The proposals prohibit recipients of funding from expanding semiconductor manufacturing capacity in certain countries for as long as 10 years.
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«We have to be absolutely vigilant that not a penny of this helps China to get ahead of us,» Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told Congress last week.
The US Government sees semiconductor manufacturing as an arms race and it wants to keep its closely held secrets out of the hands of its adversaries.
The ultimate goal of the CHIPS Act is to restore American technological leadership. Not just for
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