There has never been a more important time to come together as an industry to establish the path forward to advance the foundation of innovation that will help solve the nation’s biggest challenges — Ann Kelleher, GM of Technology Development at Intel.

 

Intel Corp. which has New Mexico operations in the Rio Rancho area, has joined forces with other companies to “foster advanced manufacturing in the United States.”

The collaboration is meant to also help global competition in the semiconductor industry, the company says in a press release.

Other partners include Micron, Analog Devices and MITRE Engenuity.

“The collaboration establishes a semiconductor alliance to build a more robust U.S. semiconductor industry, to foster advanced manufacturing in the United States and to protect intellectual property amid increased global competition. The alliance will propose the foundation for a whole-of-nation approach for a more innovation-focused U.S. semiconductor industry and supply chain,” Intel said in the press release.

The semiconductor alliance, led by MITRE Engenuity, was developed from working groups in 2021. Its principles were published in a white paper on American Innovation for American Growth summarizing the alliance’s call to action for a fair and objective National Semiconductor Technology Center.

The leading U.S. semiconductor manufacturers – Intel, Micron and Analog Devices – and  MITRE Engenuity seek engagement from the semiconductor alliance working group, industry and experts from all facets of the U.S. semiconductor ecosystem, including integrated device manufacturers; fabless chip companies; providers of infrastructure, design and manufacturing tools; and technology innovators from industry and academia.

“The semiconductor industry in the U.S. is at an inflection point. There has never been a more important time to come together as an industry to establish the path forward to advance the foundation of innovation that will help solve the nation’s biggest challenges,” said Ann Kelleher, executive vice president and general manager of Technology Development at Intel.

“The Semiconductor Alliance is an open collaboration that will leverage current and future R&D investments by industry and government throughout the U.S. and will support the spirit of the CHIPS for America Act to re-establish American industry leadership.”