Taiwan touts 'democracy chips' in meeting with US state governor

Published August 22, 2022
This handout picture taken and released by Taiwan’s Presidential Office on August 22 shows Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen (R) speaking with Eric Holcomb (L), the Republican governor of the US state of Indiana, during a meeting at the Presidential Office in Taipei. — AFP
This handout picture taken and released by Taiwan’s Presidential Office on August 22 shows Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen (R) speaking with Eric Holcomb (L), the Republican governor of the US state of Indiana, during a meeting at the Presidential Office in Taipei. — AFP

Taiwan wants to ensure its partners have reliable supplies of semiconductors, or “democracy chips”, President Tsai Ing-wen told the governor of the US state of Indiana on Monday, saying China's threats mean fellow democracies have to cooperate.

Governor Eric Holcomb is making the third trip to Taiwan this month by a US delegation after US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited briefly, infuriating China, which views Taiwan as its own territory.

A week after Pelosi's visit, five US lawmakers, led by Senator Ed Markey, visited Taiwan.

Read: Seven decades of China-Taiwan tensions

China staged extensive military exercises near Taiwan after Pelosi's visit. Taiwan rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims, saying only the island's people can decide their future.

“Taiwan has been confronted by military threats from China, in and around the Taiwan Strait,” Tsai told Holcomb during a meeting at her office in Taipei.

“At this moment, democratic allies must stand together and boost cooperation across all areas,” she added, in remarks carried live on her social media pages.

China has yet to comment on Holcomb's visit.

Holcomb is due to meet representatives of Taiwan's semiconductor companies on his visit amid an expansion of links between his state and the island, which is home to the world's largest contact chip maker, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC) .

“Economic security is an important pillar of national and regional security,” Tsai said.

“Taiwan is willing and able to strengthen cooperation with democratic partners in building sustainable supply chains for democracy chips.”

Holcomb talked of the efforts his state was making in supporting the tech industry, pointing to a June announcement by Taiwan's MediaTek Inc, the world's fourth largest chip designer by revenue, of a new design centre in Indiana in partnership with Purdue University.

“We look so forward to working with them in designing the future,” he said.

Pains to gains

Speaking to reporters later, Holcomb said Taiwan offered some of the best high-technology talent in the world.

“We're facing and specifically seeking to turn supply chain pains into supply chain gains. I think the way we get there faster, in a more resilient fashion, is by doing it together,” he said.

Holcomb oversaw the signing of a cooperation agreement between Purdue and Taiwanese electronics contract manufacturer Wistron Corp, with company chairman Simon Lin mentioning opportunities to collaborate on areas like cybersecurity and smart factories.

Taiwan has been keen to show the United States, its most important international backer, that it is a reliable friend as a global chip crunch impacts auto production and consumer electronics.

Tsai said Indiana stood to become a centre for chip technology following this month's signing into law of a US act to subsidise the domestic semiconductor industry as it competes with Chinese and other foreign manufacturers.

TSMC is building a $12 billion plant in the US state of Arizona.

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