Sep 4, 2024; New Albany, OH, USA; The enormous Intel Chip manufacturing facility is under construction in New Albany, Ohio. Intel's project is expected to create 3,000 jobs with an annual payroll of $405 million. It has created several thousand construction jobs. The $28 billion investment is the biggest economic development project in state history.
Sep 4, 2024; New Albany, OH, USA; The enormous Intel Chip manufacturing facility is under construction in New Albany, Ohio. Intel's project is expected to create 3,000 jobs with an annual payroll of $405 million. It has created several thousand construction jobs. The $28 billion investment is the biggest economic development project in state history.
Home » News » National News » Ohio » Trump renegotiating CHIPS Act grants – putting billions for Intel, others in question
Ohio

Trump renegotiating CHIPS Act grants – putting billions for Intel, others in question

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Donald Trump’s administration is renegotiating some of former President Joe Biden’s grants to semiconductor firms, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said at a hearing on Wednesday, suggesting some awards may be axed.

Some of the Biden-era grants “just seemed overly generous, and we’ve been able to renegotiate them,” Lutnick told lawmakers on the Senate Appropriations Committee, adding the goal was to benefit American taxpayers.

Video Thumbnail

“All the deals are getting better, and the only deals that are not getting done are deals that should have never been done in the first place,” Lutnick said, appearing to signal that not all the awards would survive renegotiation.

Biden in 2022 signed the CHIPS and Science Act to plow $52.7 billion into boosting semiconductor chips manufacturing and research in the U.S. and luring chipmakers away from Asia.

The program rolled out billions in grants for semiconductor heavyweights including Taiwan’s TSMC, South Korea’s Samsung and SK Hynix, as well as U.S.-based Intel and Micron.

Intel is in the middle of investing $28 billion to construct two massive microchip processing plants in the Licking County portion of New Albany. As of March, Intel had received $2.2 billion of its $7.865 billion in funding as part of the federal CHIPS Incentives Program. At least $1.5 billion of that funding was set to go toward the New Albany project, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce.

The grants, while signed, had only just begun to be disbursed by the time Biden left office. The details of those plans are not public but the money is meant to be disbursed as companies make progress toward their pledged plant expansions.

The local Intel project has been beset by delays. While it was originally scheduled to open this year, it may now not be completed until 2030 or 2031.

Lutnick pointed to TSMC as an example of successful renegotiation. He said the chipmaker — which won a $6 billion Chips Act award — had increased by $100 billion its initial pledge to invest $65 billion in U.S. manufacturing.

“We were able to modify the award for the same $6 billion of (government) funding,” he said.

TSMC announced the $100 billion in added investment in March but it was not immediately clear whether that was part of a renegotiation of its Chips Act award.

TSMC declined to comment.

Reuters reported in February that the White House was seeking to renegotiate the awards and had signaled delays to some upcoming semiconductor disbursements.

Lutnick also said the administration agrees with the goal of having more than 50% of global AI computing capacity in America, responding to concerns that deals like the one announced by Trump last month to allow the United Arab Emirates to buy advanced American artificial intelligence chips could deprive the United States of key AI computing power.

(Reporting by Alexandra Alper; Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Taipei; Editing by David Gregorio, Deepa Babington and Edwina Gibbs)

This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: Trump renegotiating CHIPS Act grants – putting billions for Intel, others in question

Reporting by Reuters / The Columbus Dispatch

USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

Image

Related posts

Leave a Comment