Leading Japanese chip material maker Resonac Holdings Corp. said Monday it will form a consortium with nine other Japanese and U.S. firms to collaborate over the development of technologies deemed key in manufacturing state-of-the art semiconductors used for generative artificial intelligence.
The consortium, called US-JOINT, will be based in Silicon Valley, setting its main focus on developing so-called back-end technologies of packaging semiconductors. Its facility is expected to become fully operational next year.
"Today's rapidly expanding next-generation semiconductors for generative AI and autonomous driving require new approaches to advanced packaging technologies," Resonac, which holds the world's top share in semiconductor back-end process materials, said in a press release.
Noting that back-end processing of semiconductors has traditionally been located primarily in Asia, the company said, "Bringing packaging R&D closer to major semiconductor device makers in Silicon Valley will help to further advance the technology and solve technical issues, especially in the areas that other U.S. consortiums do not cover enough," it said.
Among the 10 companies, six are Japanese, such as chip manufacturing equipment maker Towa Corp. and Tokyo Ohka Kogyo Co., the world's leading maker of photoresist, a key chip-making material.
The four U.S. firms include semiconductor packaging company Azimuth Industrial Co. and chip toolmaker KLA Corp., Resonac said.
The move comes as the race to develop state-of-the-art chips intensifies across the globe to respond to growing demand for generative AI and data centers to power it.
"This new consortium of leading American and Japanese companies in the semiconductor industry is the latest example of our two nations joining forces to accelerate the development of advanced technologies of global importance," U.S. Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel was quoted as saying in Resonac's press release.
Resonac was set up in January last year after the integration of chemical firm Showa Denko K.K. and its unit Showa Denko Materials Co. It makes a variety of chemical and other materials such as those used for back-end chipmaking processes.
© KYODO
4 Comments
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theFu
"leading"? That's a marketing team that means nothing. I've worked at a number of "leading" companies in narrow industries that nobody here has ever heard about.
lostrune2
Good for Japan
theFu
nVidia is far from the biggest company in the world. It is well capitalized, but that's very different than biggest.
Nvidia has fewer than 30,000 employees.
India defense ministry has nearly 3M "employees".
Walmart has 2.3M employees worldwide.
Amazon has 1.6M employees.
My point is that there are many, many, many, larger companies than nvidia.
A bunch of Indian and Chinese companies have millions of employees.
DanteKH
I hope is not too little too late.
Nvidia, which has between 70% and 95% Market Lead in A.I. will be very tough, not to beat, but even to compete with. They are an almost 4 Trillion USD company, and the biggest company in the world.
Hopefully Japan can gain the lost fame they had in the 80's and 90's, but it will be extremelly hard, especially they lost it all in the face of Korean, Chinese and American companies.