Japanese government funds are expected to help Micron’s factory in Hiroshima produce more advanced chips to power AI and quantum workloads. Credit: Micron The Japanese government on Tuesday said that it had invested $1.3 billion in Micron’s Hiroshima factory as subsidy for manufacturing more advanced chips that support or power AI and quantum workloads. The investment is expected to cover the cost of installing ASML Holding’s extreme ultraviolet lithography equipment at the factory, according to a Bloomberg report. Lithography machines are used to draw patterns on silicon chips using light, and Dutch company ASML Holdings is one of the top producers of these lithography machines. The Japanese government’s investment in Micron covers almost 40% of the company’s planned capital infusion in Japan and is aimed at securing a strong supply of advanced chips for the future, the report cited Economy Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura as saying. The capital injection into Micron comes at a time when the US-headquartered firm is facing a probe from Chinese regulators as a result of the ongoing chip war between the US and China, threatening to put majority of the company’s sales in the Asian market at risk. Micron attracted the ire of the Chinese government after the US, in January, convinced the Netherlands and Japan to join it in expanding the ban on exports of chip-making technology to China. The US first imposed restrictions on exports of chips to China in 2015, extending them in 2021 and twice in 2022. The most recent restrictions were introduced in December. US lawmakers have also been urging the Biden administration to take more action to impede China’s progress in gaining dominance in areas such as artificial intelligence and quantum computing. The suggestions included imposing trade restrictions on Chinese memory chip maker Changxin Memory Technologies as a counteroffensive to China’s ban on the use of Micron’s chips. In addition to the $1.3 billion investment, the Japanese government has set aside a sum of $1.11 billion and $170 million to help Micron cover production and development costs for the advanced chips, respectively, according to the Bloomberg report. Related content news Nvidia to power India’s AI factories with tens of thousands of AI chips India’s cloud providers and server manufacturers plan to boost Nvidia GPU deployment nearly tenfold by the year’s end compared to 18 months ago. By Prasanth Aby Thomas Oct 24, 2024 5 mins GPUs Artificial Intelligence Data Center news New middleware doubles GPU computational efficiency for AI workloads in trials, says Fujitsu The company says the computing broker is aimed at solving the GPU shortage for compute-intensive workloads by improving resource allocation and memory management across AI platforms and applications. By Elizabeth Montalbano Oct 22, 2024 4 mins GPUs Artificial Intelligence news analysis Nvidia: Latest news and insights Here’s what you need to know about the AI and processor giant’s latest product and company news. By Dan Muse Oct 15, 2024 6 mins Artificial Intelligence news US targets advanced AI and cloud firms with new reporting proposal This, along with other AI regulations, sparks worries for enterprises about escalating compliance costs and curbing innovation. By Prasanth Aby Thomas Sep 10, 2024 1 min Regulation Artificial Intelligence Cloud Computing PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe