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China lithium-ion battery manufacrturing

China Owns EV Battery Manufacturing — For Now

By George Leopold

[Editor’s note: This is the first in a series examining China’s ascendant electric vehicle sector. We examine key players, their strategies and how China has come to dominate EV manufacturing, challenging Tesla and leaving established carmakers in the dust.]

What’s at stake?
Chinese manufacturers command the global electric-vehicle battery market. Indeed, about three-quarters of the world’s EV batteries are made in China. But competition is fierce, and the search for new battery chemistries based on plentiful materials may chip away at China’s lead.

The opening round of the strategic competition for electric vehicle battery dominance is over: China has won.

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automotive supply chain process

Shackled By the Automotive Supply Chain Crisis

By Junko Yoshida

What’s at stake?
Beefing up semiconductor production capacity alone won’t solve the supply chain crisis afflicting automotive OEMs and EV startups. The players must look at their internal processes and program management — or lack thereof — for answers.

Since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, the automotive industry has been one of the segments hit hardest and longest by the global semiconductor shortage.

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Pat Gelsinger executive team at Intel Corp.

Remaking Intel

By Bolaji Ojo

What’s at stake?
In his first year as Intel’s CEO, Pat Gelsinger refocused the enterprise and swapped out the senior management team in a bid to restore the company to dominance. Now the world is watching to see whether Gelsinger’s handpicked managers and aggressive restructuring will succeed in equipping Intel to navigate a landscape that is shifting rapidly under its feet. Settle in, because it will be years before Gelsinger’s rapidly executed changes achieve their full impact.

Intel Corp. CEO Patrick Gelsinger, who rejoined the company in February 2021, is on a mission to secure the venerable microprocessor manufacturer’s future by knocking it down to its founding principles and rebuilding pretty much everything from there.

Read More »Remaking Intel
Western exports controls on technology shipments to Russia in response to Ukraine invasion

Western Tech Sanctions on Russia Begin to Bite

By George Leopold

What’s at stake?
As the economic sanctions imposed by the West seek to cut off the Kremlin from funding to wage its war, there are signs that the unprecedented Western­ and East Asian cooperation on technology export controls is depriving Russian forces of tools to fight it. But those measures are most effective as long-game strategies, and Ukraine doesn’t have that kind of time.

Current and former U.S. officials overseeing Western efforts to cut off Russia’s access to dual-use technologies say those efforts are beginning to bear fruit as Moscow struggles to refit its battered military.

Read More »Western Tech Sanctions on Russia Begin to Bite

Leti Answers Europe’s Call for Digital Sovereignty with FD-SOI

By Adele Hars

What’s at stake?
Europe asked its “Big Three” research organizations – Leti, IMEC and Fraunhofer – to come up with recommendations for an R&D road map for the European Chips Act, a plan to bolster the continent’s shrunken chip industry. The trio’s proposal includes moving FD-SOI technology to the 10nm node for the heterogenous systems their industrial partners in automotive, IoT, health care and sustainability require. Will the EC approve this daring plan? We’ll find out this summer.

After almost two decades working his way through the ranks of Leti, Sebastian Dauvé was named CEO of the Grenoble, France-based technology research institute in July 2021. He had just a few weeks to settle into his new job when Brussels came calling with a big ask: Team up with IMEC and Fraunhofer to make recommendations for an R&D road map that would enable Europe to attain greater digital sovereignty and grow its share of the world chip market from 10 percent to 20 percent by 2030.

Read More »Leti Answers Europe’s Call for Digital Sovereignty with FD-SOI
China startups reined in by common prosperity initiative Xi Jinping

China’s ‘Common Prosperity’ Campaign Backfires

By George Leopold

What’s at stake?
China’s Communist Party launched a wealth-redistribution campaign last year, cracking down on overseas security listings ostensibly in the name of data security. It hasn’t worked, and Chinese financial regulators appear to be in tactical retreat.

President Xi Jinping effectively erased more than one-third of Chinese technology companies’ market capitalization after launching a crackdown on U.S. stock market listings, according to a U.S. economic security assessment.

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Japan Visa

The Tortuous Road to My Mother’s Funeral

By Junko Yoshida

This is a story in development. As I write it, I still don’t know how it will turn out. Uncertainty is the name of the game.

It started last weekend, with my mother’s death. Kiyoko Yoshida survived many trials in her life — including, when she was a teenager, the A-bombing of Hiroshima. She endured the death of my big sister, Mariko, and stoically took over the job of raising Mariko’s two sons, though she was over 60 at the time. She survived the passing of my father, and ultimately, she even outlasted Covid-19. Finally, she just quietly withered away at the age of 93.

Because of pandemic protocols imposed by the Japanese government, the last time I saw my mother was November 2019.

Read More »The Tortuous Road to My Mother’s Funeral