SIA Launches Semiconductor Data Dashboard

FAQ 2022-12-20

The Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) today launched a new Semiconductor Unit Sales Dashboard to provide regularly updated, publicly available sales data for a range of semiconductor products. Amid the ongoing global chip shortage, the Dashboard provides information to industry, government stakeholders, and the public at large about unit sales of semiconductors. Dashboard data is provided on a three-month moving average and will be updated on a monthly basis.

The semiconductor industry has taken extraordinary steps to address the ongoing global chip shortage in the short term, including ramping up production and shipments to unprecedented levels. The Dashboard is aimed at promoting transparency in the global chip market, so industry, government, and other stakeholders can make informed decisions in real time about further efforts to resolve the current shortage and avert future ones.

Demand for semiconductors is projected to grow substantially in the years ahead due to the increased digitization of the economy, growing demand for “smart” products, increased remote work, schooling, and shopping, and the importance of advanced technologies in addressing climate change and healthcare needs, among other factors. To meet this growing demand and counter the supply chain shock caused by the pandemic, the semiconductor industry has in the short term substantially expanded shipments by increasing the utilization of existing manufacturing capacity.

To meet increased chip demand over the long term, more semiconductor manufacturing facilities, called fabs, must be built. Congress is considering comprehensive competitiveness legislation that would provide $52 billion in federal investments for the domestic semiconductor manufacturing and research provisions in the CHIPS for America Act.

SIA also supports a semiconductor investment tax credit, as called for by the FABS Act, to complement the manufacturing incentives and research investments in the CHIPS Act. SIA has called for enacting this legislation and expanding it to cover both semiconductor manufacturing and design.

The semiconductor industry remains committed to continuing efforts to address the ongoing global chip shortage and working with leaders in Washington to advance legislation that will help strengthen U.S. chip supply chains over the long term and avert future semiconductor shortages. 
Disclaimer: The opinions, beliefs, and viewpoints expressed by the various authors and/or forum participants on this website do not necessarily reflect the opinions, beliefs, and viewpoints of Lansheng Technology Limited or official policies of Lansheng Technology Limited.

Previous: What are the considerations when choosing electronic components?

Next: SIA Highlights Low Risk of Forced Labor in Semiconductor Supply Chains

Related news

In an effort to boost the growth of electric vehicles and make it more popular among the people, the Switzerland government has now announce...
It is said that the word Artificial Intelligence was first coined in 1956 and since then it has slowly started gaining a huge traction among...
The South Korean global electronics giant Samsung has now decided to reduce production of memory chips after the company witnessed a 96 perc...
The east Asian nation Japan and the US has signed an agreement on trade on electric vehicles battery minerals. The agreement is an imperativ...
Arduino has announced two new boards to the Arduino family UNO R4 Minima and UNO R4 WIFI. The board maintains the same form factor and shiel...