Rapidus 'last opportunity' to put Japan back on global chip map – Tech Xplore


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May 17, 2024
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by Hiroshi HIYAMA
Japan’s Rapidus project that brings together some of the world’s biggest companies is the “last opportunity” to put the country’s once-dominant semiconductor sector back on the global map, its chairman warned.
And, while the company has the financial firepower of the government behind it, Tetsuro Higashi told AFP in an interview that he was under no illusions about the challenges ahead.
“The entire world is becoming digitized. It is becoming crucially important for Japan to build a very strong digital technology industry,” said Higashi, an industry veteran and ex-president of Tokyo Electron, a major producer of tools to make chips.
“Japan is more than a decade behind others. It will require enormous money just to catch up.”
Tokyo has promised up to four trillion yen ($25.7 billion) in subsidies to help triple sales of domestically produced chips to more than 15 trillion yen by 2030.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), which makes half the world’s chips, has already benefitted, with the giant opening a new fabrication plant in Japan in February and planning a second.
The government has committed 920 billion yen to Rapidus, a involving Sony, Toyota, IBM and others, which is now building its fab in the Hokkaido region.
The aim is to mass-produce logic chips in Japan from 2027 using two-nanometer technology, the next frontier in chips containing an even more dizzying number of miniscule transistors.
TSMC and others are already racing to reach full production for their 2nm chips, which will be vital in powering the mooted revolution in artificial intelligence (AI).
But Higashi is confident that Rapidus can do it—and makes no bones about what’s at stake.
“This could be the last opportunity for Japan” to relaunch a competitive semiconductor-making industry, he said.
Exploding demand
By around 2027, global demand for advanced, energy-efficient semiconductors is expected to explode as AI and further enter people’s daily lives, Higashi said.
US tech firms like Google and OpenAI are also investing heavily in Japan in the hope that the country, once a world-beating technology pioneer, can regain its edge with AI.
The CEO of Nvidia, whose chips currently dominate in AI, said the firm would “do our very, very best” to supply Japan.
But it is clear that it must rely less on foreign supply, Higashi said, adding: “We are becoming a digital society. All kinds of industries in Japan will rely immensely on semiconductors.”
Japan was a big player in the in the 1980s through early 1990s, commanding a half of the global market with the likes of NEC and Toshiba leading the way.
Now it accounts for about 10 percent of the market, although it remains a leader in -making equipment and materials, with firms such as Higashi’s former employer Tokyo Electron.
© 2024 AFP
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