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Japan seeks revival as a semiconductor powerhouse

New joint venture aims to reduce reliance on Taiwanese chips but faces tough challenges

There was a feeling of national pride in Japan as the biggest participants in the semiconductor industry from ASML to Applied Materials to Lam Research gathered on the northern island of Hokkaido when construction for the country’s new chip plant kicked off last week. 

In front of the gathered guests, trade minister Yasutoshi Nishimura boasted that Chitose, a city of less than 100,000 people where the plant for newly formed joint venture Rapidus will be built, had “the potential to overtake Silicon Valley”. 

Such claims might just be typical grandstanding for a groundbreaking ceremony but there is no question about the stakes in Japan’s ¥5tn ($34bn) experiment to revive itself as a semiconductor powerhouse. Success or failure will have significant ramifications not only for Japan but also for the US and other allies looking to reshape the global chip supply chain amid rising tensions with China. 

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