Taiwan does not need to worry about its semiconductor industry moving abroad, and its position as a leader of the sector is set to continue, the head of Europe’s largest chip technology research center said.
“Although TSMC [Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, 台積電] is investing in other locations, the core of TSMC will remain in Taiwan,” said Luc Van den hove, president and CEO of Belgium’s Interuniversity Microelectronics Centre, an international research and innovation hub focusing on nanoelectronics and digital technologies.
Asked in an interview with the Central News Agency whether Taiwan’s global market share is likely to decrease in the next five to 10 years because of the concern that the world is too dependent on it for semiconductors, Van den hove said that Taiwan would remain powerful in the sector, even if more manufacturing starts in other countries.
Photo: Sam Yeh, AFP
“I don’t think that position is going to change in the next five to 10 years at all,” he said.
In addition to lauding TSMC, the world’s largest contract chipmaker, as a significant enterprise, Van den hove said that many semiconductor companies in Taiwan would continue to help the country consolidate its position as crucial to the global chip industry.
He added that Taiwan also has an advantage with a critical mass of semiconductor foundries.
“I think TSMC has grown to such a level that it has become very important to the global economy,” he said, adding that by having a limited manufacturing capability outside Taiwan, the Hsinchu-headquartered company is helping to remove risk from its semiconductor supply chain.
“I believe that the success of Taiwan is related to the success of TSMC, and if TSMC makes the decision to have a small amount of manufacturing distributed across the world, I believe that will also benefit Taiwan,” he said.
Many experts have described Taiwan’s strength in microchips, which are indispensable in the production of many electronics and other technologies, as its “silicon shield,” which could help protect it against Chinese aggression.
Van den hove said that he would like to see TSMC invest in and set up some of its manufacturing in Europe.
He also said he hopes that any potential investment by TSMC in the European chip sector would allow the two sides to further bolster their research and development (R&D) partnerships, particularly as Taiwan leads the world in manufacturing, while Europe excels at R&D and innovation.
Van den hove also highlighted the importance of international cooperation in the sector, as the EU expects to pass the European Chips Act in the second half of this year, as it seeks to strengthen the European semiconductor industry.
As the US, the EU, Japan and other countries try to establish or expand their chip supply chains to reduce dependence on foreign manufacturers, efficiencies brought about by international cooperation are likely to weaken.
Van den hove said it was unrealistic for every region to have full control over their supply chain, because “the industry has, to a large extent, become successful thanks to international collaboration, international partnerships,” he said.
If every region tried to do everything on its own, this would set back the industry and slow innovation, as self-sufficiency would lead to mediocracy, he said.
Combining “the best of the best across the world; that is the best way to accelerate innovation,” he added.
NEW IDENTITY: Known for its software, India has expanded into hardware, with its semiconductor industry growing from US$38bn in 2023 to US$45bn to US$50bn India on Saturday inaugurated its first semiconductor assembly and test facility, a milestone in the government’s push to reduce dependence on foreign chipmakers and stake a claim in a sector dominated by China. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi opened US firm Micron Technology Inc’s semiconductor assembly, test and packaging unit in his home state of Gujarat, hailing the “dawn of a new era” for India’s technology ambitions. “When young Indians look back in the future, they will see this decade as the turning point in our tech future,” Modi told the event, which was broadcast on his YouTube channel. The plant would convert
Nanya Technology Corp (南亞科技) yesterday said the DRAM supply crunch could extend through 2028, as the artificial intelligence (AI) boom has led the world’s major memory makers to dramatically reduce production of standard DRAM and allocate a significant portion of their capacity for high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips. The most severe supply constraints would stretch to the first half of next year due to “very limited” increases in new DRAM capacity worldwide, Nanya Technology president Lee Pei-ing (李培瑛) told a news briefing. The company plans to increase monthly 12-inch wafer capacity to 20,000 in the first half of 2028 after a
Property transactions in the nation’s six special municipalities plunged last month, as a lengthy Lunar New Year holiday combined with ongoing credit tightening dampened housing market activity, data compiled by local land administration offices released on Monday showed. The six cities recorded a total of 10,480 property transfers last month, down 42.5 percent from January and marking the second-lowest monthly level on record, the data showed. “The sharp drop largely reflected seasonal factors and tighter credit conditions,” Evertrust Rehouse Co (永慶房屋) deputy research manager Chen Chin-ping (陳金萍) said. The nine-day Lunar New Year holiday fell in February this year, reducing
New vehicle sales in Taiwan plunged about 37 percent sequentially last month as the long Lunar New Year holiday and 228 Peace Memorial Day holiday cut short the number of working days, along with the lingering uncertainty over import tax cuts on US vehicles, market researcher U-Car said in a report yesterday. New car sales last month totaled 22,043, slumping from 35,073 units in January and down 19.89 percent from 37,515 in February last year, U-Car data showed. Sales of imported luxury cars, led by Mercedes-Benz, plummeted about 45 percent to 3,109 units last month from 5,663 units in the previous month,