What the CHIPS Act Looks Like Now

A flurry of contracts went to a range of projects

1 min read

Samuel K. Moore is IEEE Spectrum’s semiconductor editor.

The U.S. CHIPS and Science Act of 2022 aimed to reestablish advanced manufacturing for logic and memory in the United States, as well as boost or establish other chipmaking activities. The job is far from complete, but a look at where the money is expected to go points to a potentially broad geographic boost for the domestic chip industry. That’s assuming it continues.

Not long after the law took effect, the federal government began careful negotiations and had in hand proposed deals for more than 30 projects by the end of October 2024.

After Donald Trump won the 2024 election, the CHIPS Office went into high gear, converting those proposed deals into awards. It agreed to more than $30 billion in the roughly two months before Trump took office.

But things have gotten deathly quiet since then.

Proponents of the CHIPS Act shouldn’t panic…yet, says Russell Harrison, managing director of IEEE-USA and an expert on the workings of Washington. New administrations often press pause to examine what they want to keep and change—and to find ways to take credit for successes.

In the meantime, Harrison’s team is focused on getting Congress to fund the parts of the act meant to solidify any manufacturing gains—such as the R&D and workforce-development programs.

The Conversation (2)
R K Rannow
R K Rannow07 Aug, 2025
M

Perhaps the real missed opportunity was the materials aspect, as all the fabs would need materials (e.g., Au, Ag Pt, Pd, HfO2, TiN, TaN, CU, W, Co, Ru, Si3N4, SiO2, H2SO4, HNO3, HF, ...). The US produces around 100 chemicals used in front-end wafer processing, but more than 60% of the chemical supply chain is imported. Then we have the supply chain vulnerabilities, including cybersecurity related, that is in serious need of attention.

Joshua Stern
Joshua Stern11 Aug, 2025
LM

It is very hard to get information on just who is getting how much for what, if government or anyone develops an easy way to see that, I hope Spectrum can help publicize it. The cash award for Intel, flagship for the whole act, is really too small (and too late), but it turns out there are tax credits and such to come of equal or greater magnitude (if they survive that long). It's never easy to track pork barrel spending, no matter how well intentioned.