US finalizes $123 million chips award for Polar Semiconductor

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Commerce Department said on Tuesday it had finalized a $123 million grant for Polar Semiconductor to expand its plant in Minnesota, which would allow the company to nearly double its U.S. production capacity of power and sensor chips.

The award, part of the Biden administration's $52.7 billion semiconductor manufacturing and research subsidy program, is the first in the program to be finalized by the department. Commerce will distribute funds based on Polar’s completion of project milestones.

Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said the award would help "create a new U.S.-owned foundry for sensor and power semiconductors" and boost Polar production from roughly 20,000 wafers per month to 40,000 serving aerospace, automotive, and defense needs.

The state of Minnesota is contributing $75 million to the $525 million expansion at Polar.

In April, Polar -- 70% owned by Sanken Electric and 30% held by Allegro MicroSystems -- said Niobrara Capital and Prysm Capital planned to invest $175 million for around 59% of Polar.

Commerce has allocated more than $35 billion for 26 projects including $6.4 billion in grants to South Korea's Samsung (KS:005930 ) to expand chip production in Texas, $8.5 billion for Intel (NASDAQ:INTC ), $6.6 billion for Taiwan's TSMC to build out its American production and $6.1 billion for Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU ) to fund U.S. factories.

The department must complete due diligence before it can finalize awards.

"We expect this to be the first of many awards to be finalized soon," said top White House economic adviser Lael Brainard on Monday.

Added Raimondo: "You're going to start to see more awards like this, dollars to companies in the coming weeks and months."



The 2022 chips law championed by President Joe Biden aims to boost efforts to make the U.S. more competitive with China and dramatically expand U.S. chips production. The chips law also includes a 25% investment tax credit for building chip plants, estimated to be worth $24 billion.

Separately, Congress gave final approval on Monday to legislation that will streamline federal permitting processes for semiconductor manufacturing projects.

Source: Investing.com

Останні публікації
BRB Foods Files for 2.6M Share IPO at $4-$5/sh
24.09.2024 - 15:00
With Fed easing underway what's next for markets? UBS weighs in
24.09.2024 - 15:00
Google, Volkswagen partner on smartphone AI assistant
24.09.2024 - 15:00
Deere, Snowflake and Starbucks fell premarket; Tesla, Salesforce rise
24.09.2024 - 15:00
Firms including Amazon to buy $180 million in carbon credits from namesake rainforest
24.09.2024 - 15:00
Fed easing cycle may boost home improvement chains - Oppenheimer
24.09.2024 - 15:00
AutoZone shares fall as Q4 earnings miss expectations
24.09.2024 - 15:00
Factbox-Qualcomm's potential bid for Intel turns the spotlight on their products
24.09.2024 - 15:00
Nvidia stock: Morgan Stanley says Hopper/Blackwell demand is strong
24.09.2024 - 15:00
Snap to integrate Google's Gemini AI in its chatbot, shares gain
24.09.2024 - 15:00
FrontView REIT aims to raise up to $277 million in US IPO
24.09.2024 - 15:00
Boeing expects disruption 2-3 weeks beyond end of strike, says Ryanair
24.09.2024 - 15:00
Chinese retailer Miniso dips premarket on plans to buy Yonghui Superstores stake
24.09.2024 - 15:00
UBS downgrades Swatch Group and Moncler, citing soft demand in luxury markets
24.09.2024 - 15:00
BP, Exxon downgraded at Redburn, oil price forecast cut
24.09.2024 - 15:00

© Analytic DC. All Rights Reserved.

new
Торгові ідеї GBP/USD H1
Ласкаво просимо в чат підтримки!
*
*

Ваш запит успішно надіслано!
Скоро з вами зв′яжуться.