CIOTechOutlook Team | Friday, 11 November 2022, 10:10 IST
Japan said it will fund an initial 70 billion yen ($500 million) in a new semiconductor venture led by tech firms including Sony Group Corp and NEC Corp as it rushes to re-assert itself as a leading maker of advanced chips.
"Semiconductors are going to be a critical component for the development of new leading-edge technologies such as AI, digital industries and in healthcare," Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Yasutoshi Nishimura said at a news briefing.
The new chip firm will be named Rapidus and aims to begin making chips in the second half of the decade, he said.
Japan's government will likely invest billions of dollars more going forward and wants to lure U.S. and European chip-related organizations to the venture, such as International Business Machine Corp (IBM) and ASML Holdings, a trade and industry official told Sources.
As trade friction between the United States and China deepens and Washington restricts Beijing's access to sensitive semiconductor technology, Japan is rushing to recover its chip manufacturing base. It want to ensure its carmakers and information technology companies do not run short of the key component and that it has advanced chip technology necessary to nurture new fields such as artificial intelligence (AI).
Japan, which once made over half the world's semiconductors, is also concerned that China may attempt to take control of Taiwan, the current global hub for advanced logic chip production. To revive chipmaking, Japan's government has offered financial assistance to encourage foreign chip makers to build plants in Japan. Last year, it gave 400 billion yen to help Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, the world's leading maker of logic chips, build a plant in Kumamoto prefecture that will supply semiconductors to Sony and autopart maker Denso Corp.
In July, Japan also offered a 93 billion yen subsidy to help memory chip makers Kioxia Corp and Western Digital Corp expand output in Japan. In September, it pledged to give U.S. chipmaker Micron Technology 46.5 billion yen so it can add production capacity at its plant in Hiroshima.
The new chip venture represents the next phase in Japan's semiconductor strategy and is a further indication of its deepening cooperation in technology development with the United States. The two countries in July agreed to establish a new joint research centre to develop faster and more power-efficient next-generation sub 2-nanometre semiconductors.
Other corporate investors in Rapidus include Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp , memory chip maker Kioxia Holdings, Softbank Corp, Denso, Toyota Motor Corp and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group.
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