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Semiconductors
TechTech War

First US Chips Act grant goes to Pentagon supplier BAE for boosting domestic military semiconductor supply chain

  • The US$35 million funding will help a BAE facility in New Hampshire quadruple production of chips used in American fighter jets
  • Around a dozen additional grants are expected to be announced next year under the Chips and Science Act, US commerce chief Gina Raimondo says

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US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo looked at semiconductor products during a visit to a BAE Systems facility in Nashua, New Hampshire, on Monday. Photo: AP Photo
Bloomberg
The US announced the first semiconductor grant under the 2022 Chips and Science Act, awarding US$35 million to the American subsidiary of British aerospace firm BAE System to ramp up manufacturing of military chips.

The money will help a BAE facility in Nashua, New Hampshire, quadruple production of chips that are used in F-15 and F-35 fighter jets, the US Commerce Department said. Secretary Gina Raimondo, who travelled to New Hampshire on Monday to announce the grant, said that it seeks to “set the tone” for the rest of the chips effort.

The US has become “dangerously reliant” on a handful of Asian countries for the most sophisticated semiconductors, Raimondo said at an event in Nashua. The BAE announcement marks a new phase of the US chips effort, she said: “We started to put the money out the door.”

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Raimondo described the BAE grant as “relatively small”, adding that she expects 10 to 12 additional announcements within the next year. Those will include money for the most advanced chip-making facilities in the US, she said, and may range from tens of millions of dollars to multibillion-dollar awards.

01:57

China condemns new US law aimed at boosting domestic semiconductor manufacturing

China condemns new US law aimed at boosting domestic semiconductor manufacturing

The Chips Act set aside US$39 billion in direct grants and about US$75 billion in loans and loan guarantees to bring chip-making back to the US after decades of production in Asia.

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It has catalysed more than US$230 billion in private semiconductor investment, including from industry giants like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Intel, Micron Technology and Samsung Electronics.
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