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By Asma Adhimi
SEMI and 23 semiconductor industry companies are calling on the US Congress to extend the Advanced Manufacturing Investment Credit (AMIC), warning that the incentive is critical to maintaining momentum in domestic chip production and supply chain investment.
The industry group said the current 35% tax credit, introduced to support semiconductor manufacturing projects in the US, faces expiration in 2026 at a time when demand for chips linked to AI, quantum computing, telecoms and other emerging technologies continues to accelerate.
For eeNews Europe readers, the debate around AMIC is significant because it highlights the growing global competition over semiconductor manufacturing capacity and supply chain resilience. The outcome could also influence future investment strategies by major chipmakers and equipment suppliers operating across Europe and the US.
In a letter sent to Congress, SEMI and its members argued that allowing the credit to expire would create uncertainty for long-term manufacturing projects that require major upfront capital investment.
“The Advanced Manufacturing Investment Credit is essential to accelerating semiconductor growth in the United States—especially as semiconductor demand from emerging technologies like artificial intelligence and quantum technologies continues to surge,” said Joe Stockunas. “The AMIC’s looming expiration threatens business planning and long-term capital investment. Congress must act now to ensure American competitiveness and a resilient supply chain.”
The association said the semiconductor industry is entering a period of rapid expansion driven by next-generation applications, but warned that fabs and related infrastructure projects depend heavily on predictable tax and policy frameworks.
SEMI also argued that the tax credit should be broadened to include additional parts of the semiconductor ecosystem currently excluded from the scheme, including semiconductor materials, chemicals and electronic design automation (EDA) tools.
The companies signing the letter span the semiconductor supply chain, including chipmakers, wafer suppliers, equipment vendors and test specialists.
Among the signatories are Intel Corporation, TSMC, Samsung, SK hynix Inc., Applied Materials, Inc., ASML and Tokyo Electron U.S. Holdings, Inc..
Other supporters include GlobalFoundries, Texas Instruments and Lam Research Corporation.
The push for an extension comes as governments worldwide continue to ramp up semiconductor incentives and industrial policies aimed at securing regional manufacturing capacity and reducing dependence on overseas supply chains.
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