Photo by Vishnu Mohanan on UnsplashTechWorks Semiconductor Leadership Group (SLG) consists of executives from across the UK semiconductor industry and is supported by
TechWorks, the UK’s deep tech trade association. The group provides a unified and balanced industry voice to support the UK Government by identifying strengths, challenges and opportunities which define the semiconductor sector. The group is chaired by TechWorks’ CEO Charles Sturman and includes executives from leading chip technology firms including Bourns, Clas-sic, Imagination, Paragraf, Plessey, Pragmatic and XMOS.
Ahead of the Chancellor’s Autumn Statement tomorrow, the group has published a paper urging HM Treasury to find effective mechanisms to support the UK semiconductor manufacturing sector, ensuring it continues to compete globally, even while many international competitors are subsidised. They argue that UK chip manufacturers need a level playing field to compete globally and this means, as a minimum, a support mechanism for capital expenditure and access to finance for the necessary step-up expenditure to remain competitive.
Although the UK does not try to compete with ultra-high volume chip manufacturers in the Far East, it does have world-leading companies exporting millions of chips in important new markets such
as power electronics for electric vehicles and renewable energy, 5G radio communications, photonics for augmented reality and high-performance computing and MEMS (nanoscale structures) for sensors in life science, automotive and robotics.
To scale and maintain their lead, these companies must periodically upgrade and enhance their facilities. However, the long-term, capital-intensive nature of chip manufacturing coupled with the lack of market understanding in finance markets make these investments difficult to obtain from traditional investors even though in the long term, such companies often grow to be highly successful if they can maintain their lead through appropriate investments.
Critical to the UKThe Government semiconductor strategy published in May stated: “We will announce plans by the autumn to further support the competitiveness of the semiconductor manufacturing sector that is critical to the UK.” In its paper, the SLG aims to provide industry input into this planning and support HM Treasury in securing the future of this important industry sector.
Ahead of the Chancellor’s Autumn Statement, the group has urged HM Treasury to: change capex rules for Innovation and R&D schemes (UKRI and R&D tax credits) to allow significant capex recovery when investing in strategic enhancements to semiconductor manufacturing; increase the maximum funding available from UKRI/InnovateUK for specific semiconductor manufacturing enhancements to ensure the UK business can remain globally competitive; create a matched funding or lead investor scheme in support of strategic upgrades to UK facilities where applicable companies can demonstrate the ability to lead globally through such enhancements; and address the shortage of process engineers, technicians and operators through apprenticeship system reform, offering employers more flexibility in how they use their Apprenticeship Levy contributions.
Charles Sturman, chair of the Techworks SLG, said: “The Chancellor’s Autumn Statement is an opportunity for the Government to show that it recognises the challenges faced by the UK’s semiconductor manufacturing sector and to propose meaningful interventions in support of this strategic industry, as indicated in the strategy. We hope our proposal helps the Government to understand what is required for the industry to remain competitive on a global scale.”
Graeme Shaw, CEO of Semefab Ltd, a manufacturer of micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) on silicon wafers, said: “We export chips globally, and are looking forward to the Chancellor’s Statement this autumn as an opportunity for the UK to indicate its understanding and support for the semiconductor manufacturing sector as other nations have demonstrated recently.”