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CARS
Automobiles have become increasingly dependent on chips – for everything from computer management of engines for better fuel economy to driver-assistance features such as emergency breaking. The crisis has forced many to curtail the production of less profitable vehicles. General Motors Co
IHS said a fire at a Japanese chip-making factory owned by Renesas Electronics Corp, which accounts for 30 percent of the global market for microcontroller units used in cars, has worsened the situation. Severe winter weather in Texas has also forced Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, NXP Semiconductors and Infineon to shut down factories temporarily. Infineon and NXP are major automotive chip suppliers, and analysts expect the disruptions to add to the shortfalls in the ailing sector.
ASIAN SQUEEZE
At the root of the squeeze is the under-investment in 8-inch chip manufacturing plants owned mostly by Asian firms, which means they have struggled to ramp up production as demand for 5G phones and laptops picked up faster than expected. Qualcomm, whose chips feature in Samsung phones, is one major chipmaker struggling to keep up with demand. Apple’s major supplier Foxconn also warned of the chip shortage affecting supply chains to clients.
The majority of chip production occurs in Asia currently, where major contract manufacturers such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC) and Samsung handle production for hundreds of different chip companies. US semiconductor companies account for 47 percent of global chip sales, but only 12 percent of global manufacturing is done in the United States.
WHAT’S BEING DONE ABOUT IT?
Factories that produce wafers cost tens of billions of dollars to build, and expanding their capacity can take up to a year for testing and qualifying complex tools.
US President Joe Biden has sought $37 billion in funding for legislation to supercharge chip manufacturing in the country. Currently, four new factories are slated in the country, two by Intel Corp and one by TSMC in Arizona, and another by Samsung in Texas.
China has also offered a myriad of subsidies to the chip industry as it tries to reduce its dependence on Western technology.
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