Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-11-15 15:30:07| Engadget

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TMSC) is the first CHIPS Act awardee to get part of the money that the government has promised. The Biden administration has finalized its grants for TSMC, which expects to receive $6.6 billion in grants as part of their agreement to grow semiconductor production in the US. TSMC will also loan another $5 billion from the government to fund the expansion of its planned $65 billion three-factory complex in Arizona. According to Bloomberg, it's getting at least $1 billion from the total before the year ends, since it has already met a certain set of requirements.  In October, a Canadian research firm discovered that Huawei was using TSMC chips for its artificial intelligence accelerators even though that violates US government sanctions. TSMC denied having any working relationship with Huawei, and it stopped shipping to the client that may have been illegally sending its chips to Huawei. It also decided to stop producing advanced AI chips for its Chinese clients, reportedly because it wanted to show the US government that it's "not acting against US interests." "Todays final agreement with TSMC the worlds leading manufacturer of advanced semiconductors will spur $65 billion dollars of private investment to build three state-of-the-art facilities in Arizona and create tens of thousands of jobs by the end of the decade.... The first of TSMCs three facilities is on track to fully open early next year," President Joe Biden said in a statement.  Other companies, like Intel and Samsung, are still waiting to get their grants. Business groups are reportedly urging the government to finalize their CHIPS Act deals before Biden leaves the office. While they're not worried about the new administration killing the CHIPS Act, which enjoyed bipartisan support, they apparently want to avoid the possibility of having to renegotiate with the government. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/us-government-finalizes-tsmcs-66-billion-chips-act-incentives-143007608.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

04.02Overwatch will drop the '2' as Jetpack Cat and four other heroes arrive on February 10
04.02X's 'open source' algorithm isn't a win for transparency, researchers say
04.02You can pre-order the Pixel 10a on February 18
04.02Anthropic says it won't bring ads to Claude, unlike rival ChatGPT
04.02Presidents' Day sales 2026: The best tech deals from Apple, Sony, Roku and others
04.02Egypt to block Roblox for all users
04.02Alexa+ is now available nationwide, with a free text-based version for non-Prime members to try
04.02Apple's iPhone Air MagSafe battery is cheaper than ever
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

04.02Afternoon Market Internals
04.02Tomorrow's Earnings/Economic Releases of Note; Market Movers
04.02Bull Radar
04.02Bear Radar
04.02Doritos, Lays, Cheetos, and more popular snacks are getting a major discount ahead of the Super Bowl
04.02Some renters should be wary of rent now, pay later services. Heres why
04.02From Pixar to Disney+: The $100-billion blueprint behind Bob Igers Disney
04.02Amazon wants Alexa+ to be the reason you keep Prime
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .