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The Looming Taiwan Chip Disaster That Silicon Valley Has Long Ignored

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
Quick summary of a long not paywalled article. He reviewed documents, visited chip plants and interviewed more than 60 people across the government and the tech industry but he did not talk to me. :cool:

NY Time Taiwan TSMC Semiconductor.jpg


For years, U.S. officials have warned that America’s heavy reliance on Taiwan for advanced semiconductors poses a grave national and economic security risk. Taiwan, which produces roughly 90 percent of the world’s most advanced chips, sits at the center of escalating tensions with China, whose leaders have vowed to reclaim the island. In classified briefings to executives from companies such as Apple, Advanced Micro Devices and Qualcomm, national security officials cautioned that a Chinese blockade or invasion could cripple global chip supplies and devastate the U.S. tech sector.

Both the Joe Biden and Donald Trump administrations attempted to reduce this dependence. Biden championed subsidies through the CHIPS Act, allocating $50 billion to boost domestic manufacturing. Trump, by contrast, leaned heavily on tariffs, threatening steep penalties on semiconductor imports to pressure companies into reshoring production. Despite these efforts, many tech firms hesitated, deterred by higher U.S. production costs—often more than 25 percent above Taiwan’s—and concerns about lagging manufacturing technology compared with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the dominant global producer.

A 2022 confidential report commissioned by the Semiconductor Industry Association warned that cutting off Taiwan’s chip supply could trigger the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. U.S. economic output could fall 11 percent, with even steeper losses in China. The report underscored how deeply embedded Taiwanese chips are in everything from iPhones to artificial intelligence systems.

Federal officials intensified their campaign after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine demonstrated that geopolitical aggression can override economic self-interest. Intelligence leaders privately warned top executives, including Apple’s Tim Cook and Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, that China might be prepared to move on Taiwan by 2027. Yet industry action remained slow, as companies prioritized margins and competitive positioning.

Gradually, pressure produced movement. TSMC expanded its Arizona investments, eventually committing an additional $100 billion for new U.S. plants. Nvidia agreed to buy more American-made chips, while Intel—struggling financially—received federal backing, including an unusual equity stake arrangement with the government. Other firms, including Samsung and Tesla, also pledged U.S. manufacturing commitments.

Despite billions in new investments and ambitious targets to shift as much as 40 percent of Taiwan’s semiconductor capacity to the United States, progress remains incremental. Even chips produced in Arizona often require advanced packaging in Taiwan, illustrating how difficult it is to unwind decades of supply chain concentration. While Washington has made strides, Taiwan’s central role in the global semiconductor ecosystem—and the risks tied to it—remain largely intact.

 
The problem I see, is that if we want to fully reshore a full leading-edge chip & system supply chain, it’s got to be a country-level decision and focus, not part of some broader “made in America” policy. Throwing just $50B at the problem is a joke (the fully loaded cost of building and operating just one Gerald Ford class aircraft is about $50B).
 
"Mr. Trump told Mr. Huang that when he spoke with Mr. Xi about the island, China’s leader would breathe heavily"

"Intel’s business predicament looked worse after Samsung signed a deal in July to manufacture chips in Taylor, Texas, for Tesla, the plant’s first customer. Elon Musk, Tesla’s chief executive, had pursued the deal after leaving the Trump administration because he was concerned about a potential attack on Taiwan, three people familiar with the deal said.

“People maybe are underweighting some of the geopolitical risks that are going to be a major factor in a few years,” Mr. Musk later said in a call with Wall Street analysts."
 
People are free to buy chips from Intel Samsung or GF if they are concerned. Personally I recommend buying from Taiwan Fabs .

What do Lisa Su and Jensen Huang say about the risk .
 
I think most people on this forum assume TSMC is a going concern past 2028. Perhaps these quotes will change your mind.
I do think TSMC will continue after 2028 with or without chinese invasion.

If China invades, Semiconductor availability will not be a top 10 concern for me. TSMC customers will have more issues than Fabs. Most TSMC wafers or even packaged chips are not sent from taiwan to the US.

I am not an expert so I just ask people who live in Taiwan.
 
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