The U.S. Department of Commerce rolled out its final rule on Friday outlining strict ‘guardrails’ for recipients of the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act funding. According to the department, beneficiaries must not materially expand their semiconductor manufacturing capacity in designated “foreign countries of concern” for 10 years from the award date. Such “material expansion” implies any increase in a facility’s production capacity by more than 5% for advanced facilities and beyond 10% for legacy facilities.
This decision comes amid mounting security apprehensions over technological advancements potentially being used against the U.S. and its allies. The rule additionally highlights the classification of specific semiconductors as “critical” to U.S. national security, especially those with properties essential for niche applications like quantum computing and specialized military capabilities. “These guardrails will protect our national security and help the United States stay ahead for decades to come,” said U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo, emphasizing the Biden administration’s intent.
The U.S. Department of Commerce rolled out its final rule on Friday outlining strict ‘guardrails’ for recipients of the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act funding. According to the department, beneficiaries must not materially expand their semiconductor manufacturing capacity in designated “foreign countries of concern” for 10 years from the award date. Such “material expansion” implies any increase in a facility’s production capacity by more than 5% for advanced facilities and beyond 10% for legacy facilities.
This decision comes amid mounting security apprehensions over technological advancements potentially being used against the U.S. and its allies. The rule additionally highlights the classification of specific semiconductors as “critical” to U.S. national security, especially those with properties essential for niche applications like quantum computing and specialized military capabilities. “These guardrails will protect our national security and help the United States stay ahead for decades to come,” said U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo, emphasizing the Biden administration’s intent.
Get 30 days
of free access to
KoreaPro
-
Full access to all analysis
-
The KOREA PRO newsletter, every business day
-
Daily analysis on the top story of the day
-
The ability to suggest topics for coverage by our specialist team
Be smart about South Korea
Get full access to expert analysis and opinion.
Start
now
No charges during your trial. Cancel anytime. A paid subscription will start after 30 days.
© Korea Risk Group. All rights reserved.
No part of this content may be reproduced, distributed, or used for
commercial purposes without prior written permission from Korea Risk
Group.