The UK is missing out on a wave of investment and falling behind other countries in the fast-growing semiconductor industry because of a lack of support from the government, British lawmakers said.
The UK government should urgently publish a long-delayed semiconductor strategy, and also look to create partnerships with allies to try to ensure the country remains part of the semiconductor supply chain, a report published yesterday by the UK’s Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee said.
Manufacturers used more than a trillion chips last year to power devices ranging from vacuum cleaners to automobiles to advanced artificial intelligence computers.
Photo: Bloomberg
The need for advanced semiconductors is expected to grow, and shortages of semiconductors since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic have exposed the vulnerabilities of economies if supply is shut off.
However, the UK industry is heavily reliant on companies in other countries, with little prospect of a turnaround unless the government improves support, the lawmakers said.
They said the government should consider supporting the creation of new semiconductor factories.
“It is not clear to us that the support currently offered by government is at anything like the scale which is needed to make a real difference, or in line with a clear strategy from ministers,” the report said.
The government initially said it would publish a semiconductor strategy in “autumn 2022,” but has so far declined to say when this would occur.
“The government is putting UK PLC at significant risk by failing to take action in support of the semiconductor industry,” Labour Party Member of Parliament Darren Jones said.
“Other countries are investing in the resilience of their semiconductor supply chains, yet ministers in the UK can’t even publish their semiconductor strategy on time,” said Jones, who is also the chair of the committee.
It comes after the government this month told the owner of the UK’s largest semiconductor factory that it must sell it to protect national security.
Nexperia Holding NV, a Dutch company owned by the Chinese conglomerate Wingtech Technology Co (聞泰科技), is planning a last-ditch appeal to try to overturn the decision.
The decision to intervene was welcomed by some observers, who argued that letting the takeover remain in place could leave the UK vulnerable to Chinese government interference.
However, the company’s staff association and management have expressed shock, outrage and fears for their jobs.
Nexperia said it welcomed the lawmakers’ commitment to consider the circumstances around the government’s intervention, although this would not take place until well after any appeal by the company is decided.
“We fully intend to appeal the government’s decision and, in the interim, remain focused on supporting our 600 staff in Newport [in south Wales] at this time, most of whom have worked at the site for many years,” a Nexperia spokesperson said, adding that “much more needs to be done to attract sufficient levels of private finance to this very capital-intensive industry.”
The most advanced computer chips have only 3-nanometers between the individual transistors that make up computer devices. Supply of those chips is dominated by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (台積電) and South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co, but China, the US and the EU are racing to build up their own advanced chip industries.
The UK is not a large global player in the semiconductor industry. It has no ability to produce advanced chips, so the report said that the UK should focus on securing partnerships with allies such as the US and Taiwan to secure inward investments to be part of their supply chains.
Simon Thomas, the chief executive of Paragraf, a company hoping to use graphene in semiconductors, gave evidence of the US aggressively courting the company to encourage it to relocate, with no equivalent effort by UK authorities.
He said the government should publish a strategy and implement it as soon as possible.
“At the moment, it is all talk and no action as regards semiconductors, but now is the time for action,” Thomas said.
“We are committed to supporting the UK’s vitally important semiconductor industry,” a government spokesperson said.
“We are reviewing our domestic capabilities and working closely with industry and international partners to develop a new semiconductor strategy which will grow the sector further and make sure our supply chains remain resilient,” the spokesperson said.
MANAGING RISKS: Taiwan has secured LNG sufficient to cover 95 percent of electricity demand for next month, UBS said, describing the government’s approach as proactive UBS Group AG has raised its forecast for Taiwan’s economic growth this year to 8 percent, up from 6.9 percent previously, and said expansion could reach as high as 8.6 percent if external energy shocks are avoided. The upgrade reflects a stronger-than-expected first-quarter performance and sustained momentum in artificial intelligence (AI)-driven exports, which UBS said are providing a firm foundation for growth despite geopolitical and energy risks. Taiwan’s GDP expanded 13.69 percent year-on-year in the first quarter, the fastest growth since the second quarter of 1987, the Directorate-General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics (DGBAS) reported on Thursday. On a seasonally
The Fair Trade Commission’s (FTC) ongoing review of Grab Holdings Ltd’s US$600 million acquisition of Foodpanda Taiwan’s operations, announced on March 23, has taken on fresh urgency as industry experts warn that the transaction could embed significant Chinese cybersecurity vulnerabilities into Taiwan’s digital infrastructure through Grab’s deep ties to autonomous-driving firm WeRide (文遠知行). Less than 16 months after the FTC blocked Uber Eats’ direct attempt to acquire Foodpanda Taiwan — citing potential combined market shares of 80 to 90 percent — the emergence of Grab as the buyer has prompted questions about whether the same competitive harm is simply being rerouted
The list of Asian stocks that benefit from business partnership with Nvidia Corp is getting longer, as the region further integrates into the artificial intelligence (AI) chip giant’s business ecosystem. Just in the past week, South Korea’s LG Electronics Inc, Taiwan’s Nanya Technology Corp (南亞科技), as well as China’s Huizhou Desay SV Automotive Co (德賽西威) and Pateo Connect Technology Shanghai Corp (博泰車聯) have become the latest to rally on news of tie-ups, supply-chain participation or product collaboration with the US chip designer. Asian suppliers account for about 90 percent of Nvidia’s production costs, up from about 65 percent last year, data compiled
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) is seeking government approval for an advanced wafer fab at the Longtan (龍潭) campus of Hsinchu Science Park (新竹科學園區), the park's bureau said today. In a written reply, the Hsinchu Science Park Bureau said it would submit a proposal for the third phase of the Longtan Science Park (龍潭科學園區), including plans for a TSMC fab, later this month to the National Science and Technology Council for review. The contract chipmaker previously bid to build a fab using a process more advanced than its current 2-nanometer (nm) technology at the Longtan Campus, but the plan was shelved