Global Chip Shortage: Everything You Need to Know – TechRepublic

Global Chip Shortage: Everything You Need to Know
Your email has been sent
As 2023 winds down, the global chip shortage that was sparked in early 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic has still not fully dissipated, and there’s no clear answer on when it will end.
This is because nearly every digital electronic device today is powered by semiconductors, which contain silicon and are critical for creating integrated circuits, also referred to as microchips. And anything that needs to compute or process information, such as smartphones, computers and even everyday appliances contains a chip.
Unfortunately, chips aren’t that easy to make — some estimates are that chips take as long as six months to produce. As a result, “Chip makers say ending the shortage is difficult because it takes years to get new factories up and running,” says a WSJ article.
Like many things, the chip shortage was the result of greater demand for integrated circuits.
Even prior to the pandemic, the semiconductor supply chain was on shaky ground due to a series of events, including trade wars between the U.S. and China and Japan and Korea, which impacted commodity pricing and distribution. In addition, natural disasters, such as a drought in Taiwan and three plant fires in Japan between 2019 and 2021, contributed to raw materials shortages, according to Electronic Products & Technology.
Once the automotive industry, a major buyer of semiconductors, began cutting chip orders in 2020, the semiconductor industry began shifting production to meet demand for other consumer applications. However, demand for cars picked up again in the second half of 2020 as people began avoiding public transportation. This exacerbated the supply and demand challenges further.
SEE: Calculate your computer hardware’s depreciation with this guide from TechRepublic Premium.
The rapid acceleration of the Internet of Things was another factor, and all of these combined variables ” … forever moves semiconductors ahead of oil as the world’s key commodity input for growth,” according to economic investment firm TS Lombard.
Some customers are hoarding supplies and buying more components than they need in case supply dries up. For example, companies such as Huawei stockpiled supplies in advance of U.S. tech bans on China earlier this year. These actions further exacerbated supply challenges with semiconductors.
Meanwhile, the semiconductor industry grows steadily and remains lucrative. In 2021, McKinsey estimated sales to grow by more than 20% to about $600 billion, with automotive, data storage and wireless industries leading the market (Figure A). The firm also predicts aggregate annual growth may average between 6% and 8% a year through 2030.
Figure A
This would result in “A $1 trillion industry by the end of the decade, assuming average price increases of about 2 percent a year and a return to balanced supply and demand after the current volatility,” McKinsey said.
The global semiconductor market rose 6.8% in 2020 compared to 2019. It was projected to grow from $573.44 billion in 2022 to $1,380.79 billion by 2029, at a compound annual growth rate of 12.2% in the forecast period, 2022-2029, according to Fortune Business Insights.
Besides the hard-hit automotive industry, the consumer electronics, industrial, smartphone, wired communications, and server and PC sectors have been impacted by the shortage of chips.
Consumer electronics benefitted when the automotive industry began slashing vehicle production early in the pandemic. Makers of laptops, TVs, smartphones, cameras and gaming consoles ordered more chips because their products heavily depend on simple semiconductors:
The consumer electronics industry had to raise prices in the face of shortages as demand exceeded supply and more people began working and going to school remotely and required more laptops, desktops and other systems. However, because demand tends to be cyclical, the high demand for consumer electronics has tapered off.
With the world increasingly eager to use AI technologies, the ability to develop and implement AI systems in 2024 could potentially be hindered by the ongoing shortage of chips. AI and GPUs require a special type of chip to train and deploy AI models as demand for AI computing power grows, Chris Miller, a professor of history at Tufts University and author of “Chip War: The Fight for the World’s Most Critical Technology,” told Marketplace. These specialized and costly GPUs are primarily made by Nvidia at one manufacturing plant in Taiwan, according to Miller.
“As the economy slows, people are buying fewer smartphones, companies are spending less money updating their data centers,” Miller explained in the Marketplace article. “But for the specific types of chips that are used for AI, there’s actually a boom and some shortages that are already becoming visible. And it seems like the demand for these types of chips is only set to grow.”
Supplies of chips began to improve in 2022, due in part to additional capacity with the slowdown in sales of PCs, smartphones and consumer electronics. Foundries in Taiwan reallocated some of this capacity to the automobile and industrial end markets, according to JP Morgan.
However, automakers are increasingly requiring chips with higher computing power — especially as the industry transitions to electric and autonomous vehicles, which are significantly different from the ones used in PCs and smartphones.
Other issues include tensions between the U.S. and China, which continue to impact the global supply chain. This is ” … spurring new government controls on sales of chips to China,” the world’s largest semiconductor market, the Semiconductor Industry Association noted in its State of the Industry report.
There are other significant policy challenges as well, such as the ability to strengthen the U.S. semiconductor workforce by reforming the country’s high-skilled immigration and STEM education systems to increase the number of workers and help contain the talent shortage, according to the SIA.
“In addition, while the global chip shortage has eased, macroeconomic headwinds and market cyclicality have caused a short-term downturn in sales, which is projected to linger throughout (2023),” the SIA said.
There are some predictions that we will see another chip shortage due to a ” … mismatch between supply and demand that cannot be addressed quickly either by chip manufacturers … scaling up production or by markets by adapting to the chip production profile,” Rakesh Kumar wrote in Fortune. “The challenge of resolving the two isn’t going away — and may even grow in size.”
Semiconductor demand is unpredictable, Kumar explained. AI, electric and autonomous vehicles, the Internet of Things and 5G and 6G will drive future chip demand.
“Yet the exact nature, speed and magnitude of that increase in demand is still unknown,” Kumar wrote.
There’s another issue: Even as efforts are made to open up new semiconductor fabs, a lack of skilled engineers may mean that many of the jobs created won’t be filled. According to new data from the SIA, the industry is projected to grow by more than 115,000 jobs by 2030, with 67,000 jobs at risk of being unfilled (Figure B).
Figure B
 
Expanding the supply of skilled designers and other semiconductor professionals will require a sustained effort for many years or even decades, said Tony Chan Carusone, CTO of Alphawave Semi and professor of electrical engineering at the University of Toronto.
“This talent squeeze is not unique to the semiconductor industry but rather is going to affect the entire technology ecosystem,” Chan Carusone told TechRepublic. “For companies who are filling semiconductor roles, creating a more robust talent pipeline should be a top priority.”
The industry is ” … faced with a challenging obstacle due to the fact that chip technology is not easily visible or tinkered with, unlike software,” Chan Carusone added. “This creates difficulty in attracting young tech professionals to pursue careers in hardware and semiconductors.”
Chan Carusone expressed hope that as one of the most important subindustries within tech, people will consider a career in semiconductors, which ” … is fast-paced, constantly evolving and can be much less volatile than a career in software.”
Despite the challenges, the SIA says the long-term outlook for the semiconductor industry remains strong, with initiatives and policies being made to increase semiconductor research and production globally.
In 2022, the U.S. passed the CHIPS Act, which ” … has begun in earnest in 2023,” according to the SIA’s report. The CHIPS Act was enacted by the U.S. government to provide needed semiconductor research investments and manufacturing incentives and to reinforce America’s economy, national security and supply chains.
The goal of the $280 billion expenditure is to prevent U.S. industries from falling prey to similar semiconductor supply chain chaos in the future.
Since last year, ” … companies from around the world have responded enthusiastically, announcing dozens of new semiconductor ecosystem projects in the U.S. totaling well over $200 billion in private investments,” the SIA said. “These projects will create tens of thousands of direct jobs in the semiconductor ecosystem and will support hundreds of thousands of additional jobs throughout the U.S. economy.”
In a push to bolster domestic semiconductor production overseas, the European Union has approved the EU’s Chips Act, with the goal of producing 20% of the world’s semiconductors by 2030, Bloomberg reported.
New plants at sites in Europe have already been announced by chip makers including Intel and STMicroelectronics. Intel announced it will make its chip manufacturing and foundry unit a stand-alone business but remain under its corporate umbrella. Now, it will compete for business like other external suppliers.
“It’s expected that this change will save as much as $3B this year and continue to generate savings to Intel’s bottom line going forward,” wrote industry analyst Jack Gold in a LinkedIn post. “This is a major change to how Intel builds chips and we think it’s an important move that’s overdue.”
Intel said the move will help it achieve its stated cost savings goal of more than $8 billion to $10 billion by the end of 2025.
In late September, the Partstack Marketplace launched as a semiconductor chip search platform for engineers, designers and equipment manufacturers. Partstack aims to bring global semiconductor buyers and sellers together to quickly locate, buy or sell millions of hard-to-find semiconductor parts from over 2,500 unique manufacturers, according to its maker, semiconductor and electronics solutions provider Partstack Corporation.
Partstack offers datasheets, guides for chip testing best practices and counterfeit component reporting features. It provides a catalog of component pricing and availability data from global suppliers, the company said.
How long the chip shortage will last depends on several factors, such as market growth, talent availability and global competition. Because of this, it’s difficult to predict when the chip shortage will actually end.
IEEE predicted the supply to grow ” … from older chip fabs and foundries running processes far from the cutting edge and on comparatively small silicon wafers.” In addition, IEEE estimated that more than 40 companies would increase capacity by more than 750,000 wafers per month by the end of 2022.
Despite this growth, Gartner has forecast worldwide semiconductor revenue to decline 11% this year.
There are ” … several wild cards that could cause more disruption, such as the global economy, geopolitical tensions, and the shortage of equipment for manufacturing bleeding-edge chips,” observed management consulting firm Bain & Co.
Even though Intel, TSMC, Texas Instruments and Samsung — the world’s largest memory chipmaker — have all announced plans to build fabs in the U.S., that may not end the chip shortage. For now, the status of increased chip production in the U.S. remains uncertain.
SEE: Check out all of TechRepublic’s cheat sheets and smart person’s guides.
Catch up on the latest tech innovations that are changing the world, including IoT, 5G, the latest about phones, security, smart cities, AI, robotics, and more. Delivered Tuesdays and Fridays
Catch up on the latest tech innovations that are changing the world, including IoT, 5G, the latest about phones, security, smart cities, AI, robotics, and more. Delivered Tuesdays and Fridays
Global Chip Shortage: Everything You Need to Know
Your email has been sent
Get the web’s best business technology news, tutorials, reviews, trends, and analysis—in your inbox. Let’s start with the basics.
* – indicates required fields
Lost your password? Request a new password
Please enter your email adress. You will receive an email message with instructions on how to reset your password.
Check your email for a password reset link. If you didn’t receive an email don’t forgot to check your spam folder, otherwise contact support.
This will help us provide you with customized content.
Thanks for signing up! Keep an eye out for a confirmation email from our team. To ensure any newsletters you subscribed to hit your inbox, make sure to add [email protected] to your contacts list.

source

Facebook Comments Box

Trả lời

Email của bạn sẽ không được hiển thị công khai. Các trường bắt buộc được đánh dấu *