The rollout of the Biden administration's CHIPS Act award money has so far focused on providing major awards for major companies, with just four leading-edge semiconductor manufacturers receiving the lion's share of the $33 billion that has been allocated to this point.
Now, with $6 billion remaining, the focus is shifting to sending smaller awards to smaller companies—dozens of them, up and down the supply chain.
"We are really focused on investing across the semiconductor ecosystem," Michael Schmidt, director of the CHIPS Program Office at the Commerce Department, told CNBC.
Intel , Taiwan Semiconductor , Samsung and Micron combined will receive nearly $28 billion, while GlobalFoundries received $1.5 billion and four smaller companies – BAE Systems, Microchip , Polar Semiconductor and Absolics – received a combined $392 million.
Another $3.5 billion has been set aside for the "secure enclave" program, which will produce semiconductors for military use.
Persons:
Michael Schmidt, Schmidt, Gina Raimondo, GlobalFoundries, –
Organizations:
Biden, Commerce Department, CNBC, Intel, Taiwan Semiconductor, Samsung, Micron, BAE Systems, Polar Semiconductor