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Top China chipmaker gets government funds for $2.4 billion plant to achieve self-sufficiency amid global chip shortage

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. will build a $2.35 billion plant with funding from the government of Shenzhen, the first major project to emerge from China’s masterplan to match the U.S. and become more self-reliant as global chip supply dwindles.


SMIC on Thursday warned that shortages could worsen this year and next and wallop Chinese businesses if the country doesn’t ramp up domestic capacity now. The company has agreed to a joint venture with the southern municipality in which it will develop and operate a chipmaking plant that can produce silicon of 28 nanometers or above, it said in a stock exchange filing. The partners aim to draw third-party investment, begin production by 2022 and eventually produce 40,000 12-inch wafers a month. Its shares rose as much as 3% in Hong Kong.

China wants to build a coterie of technology giants that can stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Intel Corp. and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. While specifics of that endeavor won’t emerge for months, Premier Li Keqiang has pledged to boost spending and drive research into cutting-edge chips in the country’s latest five-year targets, laying out a technological blueprint to vie for global influence with the U.S.
 
In this business, $2B is a rounding error.

Indeed. You would think the China Government would throw a few more billions to SMIC considering the history and the importance of the logic foundry business. How many billions did they spend on the failed memory fabs?
 
China have had 2 fabs start in the last 3 years -- and shutdown before they were ever operational. (at least 1 of them had tools installed -- then shutdown)

It will be interesting to see how this goes.

One thing I saw is China can build a fab much more quickly than in the US ... there is little/no regulation. (or it can be bypassed) The Chengdu fab was almost completed in 12 months from breaking ground.
 
China have had 2 fabs start in the last 3 years -- and shutdown before they were ever operational. (at least 1 of them had tools installed -- then shutdown)

It will be interesting to see how this goes.

One thing I saw is China can build a fab much more quickly than in the US ... there is little/no regulation. (or it can be bypassed) The Chengdu fab was almost completed in 12 months from breaking ground.
you are right about china having fabs started but then shut down. but you did not know they also had several more fabs started and today are running at capacity.
i just wish our governments in the US are half as ambitious or half as aggressive in supporting the chip industry, the heart of all tech. really, just half will be enough for us to continue our leading positions for years to come.
 
you are right about china having fabs started but then shut down. but you did not know they also had several more fabs started and today are running at capacity.
i just wish our governments in the US are half as ambitious or half as aggressive in supporting the chip industry, the heart of all tech. really, just half will be enough for us to continue our leading positions for years to come.
Why do you think I didn't know that ?
 
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