US officials face tough choices for subsidizing AI chip manufacturing
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[March 06, 2024] By
Stephen Nellis and Max A. Cherney
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - U.S. officials have earmarked close to $30
billion in subsidies for advanced semiconductor manufacturing, aiming to
bring cutting-edge artificial-intelligence chip development and
manufacturing to American soil.
But with money set to start flowing in the next few weeks, accomplishing
that goal is far from certain, industry experts say. The Biden
administration must weigh how much taxpayer money to allocate among
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, a powerful foreign leader, and
Intel, a beleaguered homegrown company whose turnaround efforts remain
promising but untested.
Betting on AI chips is also challenging in the rapidly evolving
industry. Handing out subsidies today to the likes of Intel, TSMC or
Samsung Electronics, which is also vying for federal dollars and is the
only other firm in the world that can make advanced chips, does not
guarantee security in the AI landscape of the future.
"AI itself is moving so quickly, if you focus on today's AI chips, maybe
two years from now it's a whole different thing," said Jay Goldberg,
chief executive of D2D Advisory, a finance and strategy consulting firm.
"As opposed to the (general) road map of advanced chipmaking which we
know pretty clearly for the next decade."
The money will come from the U.S. CHIPS Act, which passed in 2022.
Intel, TSMC and Samsung are all building factories in the U.S. and are
all likely to receive some degree of U.S. subsidies. The main question
is how U.S. officials allocate the money to meet the goal of bolstering
AI chip production.
"We don’t manufacture or package any of the leading-edge AI chips needed
to fuel the innovation ecosystem and power our most critical defense
systems," U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said in a speech last
month. "We cannot build the next generation of technological leadership
on such a shaky foundation."
The Commerce Department declined to comment.
MADE IN TAIWAN
TSMC, the global leader in making AI chips, has yet to commit to
bringing its most advanced technology to the United States.
At the moment, TSMC manufactures chips for Nvidia, Advanced Micro
Devices, Microsoft and Alphabet's Google in Taiwan. The company is not
expected to bring its advanced 3-nanometer manufacturing, which is
already used to make iPhone 15 Pro chips, to Arizona until at 2027 or
2028, despite starting mass production in Taiwan last year. It has not
disclosed any plans to bring 2-nanometer technology, which will start
production next year in Taiwan, to the U.S.
A TSMC spokesperson said the company has made "steady progress in
productive ongoing discussions with the U.S. government on inventive
funding" and its first factory in the U.S. "will enable the leadership
in the 5G and artificial intelligence era for decades."
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A silicon wafer is seen as U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris tours a
site where Applied Materials plans to build a research facility, in
Sunnyvale, California, U.S., May 22, 2023. Jim Wilson/Pool via
REUTERS/File Photo
TSMC rival Samsung has a factory in Taylor, Texas, under
construction that is expected to deploy the company's most advanced
manufacturing technology. But according to analysts and industry
sources, Samsung has long struggled to manufacture enough functional
chips on each silicon wafer to make high- volume manufacturing
profitable.
In an emailed statement, Samsung referred Reuters to its
fourth-quarter earnings call, where executives said its advanced
manufacturing processes are mass-producing chips, and that orders
for its AI accelerator chips are increasing.
That leaves Intel, which has said it will carry out its most
cutting-edge manufacturing processes - called "18A" and "14A" - in
the U.S. But it has not publicly disclosed any major customers who
plan to use the technology to make AI chips.
Allocating a large chunk of CHIPS Act funding to Intel, which many
analysts expect the U.S. government to do, is essentially a bet on
Intel's turnaround plan that CEO Pat Gelsinger announced in early
2021 after taking over.
Intel offers some advantages. AI chips are increasingly made up of
smaller "chiplets" that must be packaged together, and Intel says it
can combine chips made in its own factories with others fabricated
by rivals such as TSMC.
"Their bias is that they're going to be the (manufacturer) of choice
for these crazy complex systems of chips. And they're going to do
that in the United States," said Ben Bajarin, chief executive of
analyst firm Creative Strategies.
But to become an AI chip powerhouse, Intel has the difficult task of
retaking the manufacturing lead from TSMC. Then it must transform
its business to a service-oriented contract manufacturer for outside
customers.
While recently unveiled Intel manufacturing technology looks
promising on paper, the reality is that almost every advanced AI
chip currently on the market is made by TSMC.
"The biggest issue they have is to execute," Dan Hutcheson, vice
chair at analyst firm TechInsights, said of Intel. "The whole
foundry business is a good year or two away before they either make
it or break it."
An Intel spokesperson said in a statement that the company is on
track with its "18A" process, which it expects to be
"manufacturing-ready" in the second half of the year.
(Reporting by Max Cherney and Stephen Nellis in San Francisco;
Additional reporting by Joyce Lee in Seoul and Yi-Mou Lee in Taipei;
Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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