US to award Rocket Lab US$23.9mil to boost satellite, spacecraft chips

US to award Rocket Lab US$23.9mil to boost satellite, spacecraft chips

The funds are to come from the Biden administration's US$52.7 billion chip manufacturing and research subsidy programme.

US commerce secretary Gina Raimondo said the US$23.9 million award would help Rocket Lab meet a growing demand for semiconductor chips. (Pool/AP pic)
WASHINGTON:
The US commerce department said on Tuesday that it planned to award Rocket Lab US$23.9 million to dramatically boost the production of compound semiconductors used in satellites and spacecraft.

The award for Rocket Lab unit SolAero Technologies Corp “would help create a more robust and resilient supply of space-grade solar cells that power spacecrafts and satellites”, the department said, adding it would “increase Rocket Lab’s compound semiconductor production by 50% within the next three years.”

The funds are to come from the Biden administration’s US$52.7 billion chip manufacturing and research subsidy programme that has benefitted companies like South Korea’s Samsung Electronics, Intel, and Taiwan’s TSMC.

Separately, the State of New Mexico has committed to providing financial assistance and incentives worth US$25.5 million to Rocket Lab as the company works on the expansion of its facility in Albuquerque.

Rocket Lab, founded in 2006 by New Zealander Peter Beck, is one of two US firms specialising in the production of highly efficient, radiation-resistant compound semiconductors called space-grade solar cells, the department said.

Commerce secretary Gina Raimondo said solar cells were crucial for keeping communication and space technology powered and operational, and the proposed US$23.9 million award would help Rocket Lab expand production facilities to meet growing demand for chips from the US military, Nasa, and the commercial space industry.

The company’s solar cells support US space programmes, including missile awareness systems, the James Webb Space Telescope, Nasas Artemis lunar explorations, Ingenuity Mars Helicopter, and Mars Insight Lander.

Rocket Lab has won several hundreds of millions of dollars in US federal contracts, including for satellite production, the launch of spacecraft, and a deal to explore delivering cargo using its rockets.

The latest award, like others from the chips subsidy programme, have yet to be finalised and amounts could change after the commerce department conducts due diligence.

The proposed investment would also benefit Rocket Lab’s Albuquerque facility expansion and create more than 100 manufacturing jobs, the company said in a statement.

Rocket Lab also plans to claim the department of the treasury’s investment tax credit of up to 25% of qualified capital expenditures. The investment tax credit created by the Chips Act is estimated to be worth about US$24 billion.

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