Biden administration calls a meeting with Taiwanese chipmaker to discuss the chip crisis

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The officials of the newly elected U.S. President Biden administration have called an ad-hoc meeting next week with the Taiwanese government and industry officials. They are expected to pressure the world’s most valuable semiconductor company, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), and its peers to increase their supply of vital chips to American automakers who are facing a shortage.

The virtual conference set to be the most high-profile meeting between newly appointed Biden administration officials and their counterparts from Taipei is scheduled for Thursday U.S. time. According to a report by Bloomberg, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matt Murray and Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary of Commerce Richard Steffens are expected to have a discussion with Taiwan Minister of Economic Affairs Wang Mei-Hua. TSMC and Media Tek Inc.’s executives are expected to attend a discussion centered on resolving a global shortage of auto-chips, it said.

The intention of the meeting is to build closer ties between the two sides. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told a regular news briefing on Friday he wasn’t aware of the meeting but reiterated that Beijing “opposes official interaction between the US and China’s Taiwan region.”

Global carmakers such as Ford Motor Company and General Motors Company face a potential $61 billion loss of revenue for the year because they can’t secure enough of the chips that go into a plethora of vehicle parts. TSMC and other Taiwanese chipmakers are among the world’s most sophisticated and produce a significant portion of the globally produced semiconductors for everything from cars and laptops.

Earlier this week, it was reported that TSMC vowed to support the global automotive industry and reallocate capacity towards it. This announcement came after the US automakers had urged the government to step in and help the industry acquire more chips.

With their traditional strength in metal-bending like Ford and Volkswagen AG, Carmakers are more prone to supply hiccups than carmakers with more software and chip expertise as vehicles become smarter and technologically more complex.

The meeting will take place as the Biden administration indicates strong support for Taiwan, an island China claims as its own. The US State Department urged China to engage in a dialogue with Taiwan this week and stop military pressure on the island, in an early nod of support for Taipei.

The dispute over Taiwan has been one of the biggest flashpoints between the US and China since the Cold War. These disputes have returned to the fore as Washington steps up support for Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen.

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