A semiconductor research facility in upstate New York was selected as one of three national technology centers and will receive up to $825 million in funding as part of a broader federal effort to boost the United States’ competitiveness in the industry.
U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer made the announcement Thursday.
The Albany NanoTech complex was selected by federal officials as the national headquarters for research into a cutting-edge semiconductor technology known as extreme ultraviolet, or EUV, lithography. The lab will have the most advanced chip-making machinery in the world and allow researchers from the semiconductor industry to collaborate with their university counterparts, according to Schumer, the Senate’s Democratic majority leader.
“When you do the high-end research, which will be done here, and you can make the most advanced chips in the world, it makes sure that our military has the edge,” Schumer said in a telephone interview. “It makes sure our economy and our companies have the cutting edge, as well.”
The National Semiconductor Technology Center Extreme Ultraviolet Accelerator is scheduled to begin operating next year. The contract for it stems from the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act, which was designed to create more high-tech jobs and help the United States compete with international rivals like China. The Biden administration has set a goal for the U.S. to make 20% of the world’s advanced chips.
The Albany lab’s selection also advances longstanding efforts by Schumer and other government officials to make upstate New York a global center of semiconductor research and manufacturing.
Gov. Kathy Hochul late last year announced a partnership with the semiconductor industry to fund construction of the EUV Center.
The Biden administration announced in February that the government would provide $1.5 billion to the computer chip company GlobalFoundries to expand its domestic production north of Albany and in Vermont. And in April, the administration announced an agreement to provide $6.1 billion in government support for Micron Technology to produce advanced memory computer chips near Syracuse, New York; and in Boise, Idaho.
“This is going to make upstate New York the center of semiconductor research, not just for America, but for the world,” Schumer said.
The Department of Commerce has not yet announced where the other two national technology centers will be.
—Michael Hill, Associated Press
Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire
Autres messages de ce groupe
Is LinkedIn the new TikTok?
Short-form video is now the fastest-growing category on LinkedIn, growing at twice the rate of other post formats on the platform. According to LinkedIn
Robinhood said on Tuesday it is rolling back the event contracts that would let users bet on the result of the
Donald Trump drew plenty of criticism by launching his own branded memecoin three days before his
The AI search firm Perplexity routinely lets users try out state-of-the-art large language models on its site, but the company moved quickly to put Chinese company DeepSeek’s new R1 model front an
Nintendo’s profits tumbled as sales of its Switch console lost momentum, prompting the
“We want grandparents who want to have pizza nights with us, attend baseball and basketball games, have ice cream dates, take bike rides, just genuinely have fun with us and our boys,” reads one p
Apple rolled out its newest iPhone app called Invites, which lets iCloud+ subs