\"\"
<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>By Alistair Smout and Kate Holton
<\/strong>
LONDON: Britain will invest 1 billion pounds ($1.3 billion) in its semiconductor<\/a> sector over the next decade as part of a long-awaited strategy that was immediately criticised by the industry for being too little to make a difference.

Chipmakers around the world have poured billions of dollars into the sector in recent years, with the United States and Europe backing the development of new plants after the COVID-19 pandemic showed the risk of relying on Taiwan and China.

Britain's plan, which has been in the works for around two years, is dwarfed by the $52.7 billion of U.S. chip subsidies and 43 billion euros ($47 billion) of proposed EU investment.

But it focuses on the area where Britain excels, the design of semiconductors, used in everything from cars to smartphones and washing machines. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said it would help Britain build a \"competitive edge on the global stage\".

While companies in the sector welcomed publication of a strategy, they criticised the scale of support.

AI chip designer Graphcore said it was \"modest\" compared with countries such as Germany, while the head of graphene maker Paragraf said it was \"flaccid\".

\"The UK's capital commitment is nothing but a rounding error in this industry,\" said Simon Thomas, CEO and founder of Paragraf, which describes itself as the only company in the world capable of manufacturing graphene to mass produce chips.

UNDERWHELMING
<\/strong>
Under the new plan, some 200 million pounds of investment will be available in 2023-25, rising to up to 1 billion pounds in the next decade. While it is focused on research and design for now, Britain said it would support investment in chip manufacturing later this year.

Citi analysts described the focus as \"sensible\" but the money as \"too little to be of significant value to major industry partners\".

Sunak, in Japan for a Group of Seven (
G7<\/a>) leaders, also announced a semiconductors partnership with Tokyo, echoing an agreement with South Korea.

Britain is home to Arm, which designs the processor technology used in nearly every smartphone, selling intellectual property to companies such as
Apple<\/a> and Qualcomm<\/a>.

It was sold to Japan's SoftBank in a 2016 deal that sparked criticism that Britain had allowed its biggest tech success to be bought by foreign investors. SoftBank now plans to list it in the United States.

Business leaders have become increasingly critical of Britain's strategy in recent months, saying they need joined-up support on everything from infrastructure to skills training and investment as they transition to a post-carbon future.

A report by a panel of lawmakers said last year that a lack of an end-to-end supply chain for semiconductors made Britain particularly exposed to any future disruption to chip supplies, such as if China were to invade Taiwan, the world's biggest semiconductor supplier.
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英国的13亿美元的半导体支持计划反应冷淡

英国的计划,已经在周围工作的两年里,美国527亿美元的芯片相比是小巫见大巫补贴和430亿欧元(合470亿美元)的提议欧盟投资。

  • 更新2023年5月19日下午04:36坚持
阅读: 100年行业专业人士
读者的形象读到100年行业专业人士
Alistair Smout和凯特·霍尔顿

伦敦:英国将投资10亿英镑(合13亿美元)半导体行业未来十年的期待已久的策略,立即被批评过于小的行业做出贡献。

芯片制造商在世界各地花费数十亿美元的行业近年来,在美国和欧洲的支持下开发新的植物COVID-19大流行后显示依赖于台湾和中国大陆的风险。

英国的计划,已经在周围工作的两年里,美国527亿美元的芯片相比是小巫见大巫补贴和430亿欧元(合470亿美元)的提议欧盟投资。

广告
但它关注英国擅长的地方,半导体的设计,用于从汽车到智能手机和洗衣机。总理的诗人Sunak表示,它将帮助英国建立一个“在全球舞台上竞争优势”。

公司在该行业欢迎战略的出版物,他们批评的规模的支持。

人工智能芯片设计Graphcore说这是“温和”与德国等国相比,而石墨烯的头制造商Paragraf说这是“弛缓性”。

“英国首都的承诺只不过是这个行业的舍入误差,”西蒙•托马斯说Paragraf的创始人和CEO,自称是世界上唯一一家能生产石墨烯量产芯片。

平庸的

在新计划下,有2亿英镑的投资将在2023 - 25日升至10亿英镑未来十年。虽然重点是研究和设计现在,英国表示将支持投资今年晚些时候在芯片制造。

花旗分析师将重点描述为“合理的”,但钱太少的重大价值主要产业伙伴”。

在日本Sunak,七国集团(七国集团(G7)半导体)的领导人,也宣布了一项与日本合作,呼应与韩国达成协议。

英国是手臂,设计中使用的处理器技术几乎每一个智能手机,等知识产权出售给公司苹果高通

广告
它被卖给日本的软银在2016年的交易,引发了批评,英国允许最大的科技成功收购了外国投资者。软银现在计划在美国。

英国商界领袖已经成为越来越重要的战略在最近几个月,说他们需要联合支持从基础设施到技能培训和投资过渡到一个碳的未来。

报告由一个议员小组去年表示,缺乏一个端到端的半导体供应链英国特别是暴露在任何未来的芯片供应的中断,比如如果中国入侵台湾,世界上最大的半导体供应商。
  • 发表在2023年5月19日下午04:33坚持
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\"\"
<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>By Alistair Smout and Kate Holton
<\/strong>
LONDON: Britain will invest 1 billion pounds ($1.3 billion) in its semiconductor<\/a> sector over the next decade as part of a long-awaited strategy that was immediately criticised by the industry for being too little to make a difference.

Chipmakers around the world have poured billions of dollars into the sector in recent years, with the United States and Europe backing the development of new plants after the COVID-19 pandemic showed the risk of relying on Taiwan and China.

Britain's plan, which has been in the works for around two years, is dwarfed by the $52.7 billion of U.S. chip subsidies and 43 billion euros ($47 billion) of proposed EU investment.

But it focuses on the area where Britain excels, the design of semiconductors, used in everything from cars to smartphones and washing machines. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said it would help Britain build a \"competitive edge on the global stage\".

While companies in the sector welcomed publication of a strategy, they criticised the scale of support.

AI chip designer Graphcore said it was \"modest\" compared with countries such as Germany, while the head of graphene maker Paragraf said it was \"flaccid\".

\"The UK's capital commitment is nothing but a rounding error in this industry,\" said Simon Thomas, CEO and founder of Paragraf, which describes itself as the only company in the world capable of manufacturing graphene to mass produce chips.

UNDERWHELMING
<\/strong>
Under the new plan, some 200 million pounds of investment will be available in 2023-25, rising to up to 1 billion pounds in the next decade. While it is focused on research and design for now, Britain said it would support investment in chip manufacturing later this year.

Citi analysts described the focus as \"sensible\" but the money as \"too little to be of significant value to major industry partners\".

Sunak, in Japan for a Group of Seven (
G7<\/a>) leaders, also announced a semiconductors partnership with Tokyo, echoing an agreement with South Korea.

Britain is home to Arm, which designs the processor technology used in nearly every smartphone, selling intellectual property to companies such as
Apple<\/a> and Qualcomm<\/a>.

It was sold to Japan's SoftBank in a 2016 deal that sparked criticism that Britain had allowed its biggest tech success to be bought by foreign investors. SoftBank now plans to list it in the United States.

Business leaders have become increasingly critical of Britain's strategy in recent months, saying they need joined-up support on everything from infrastructure to skills training and investment as they transition to a post-carbon future.

A report by a panel of lawmakers said last year that a lack of an end-to-end supply chain for semiconductors made Britain particularly exposed to any future disruption to chip supplies, such as if China were to invade Taiwan, the world's biggest semiconductor supplier.
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