Japan has added another ¥631.5 billion to Rapidus, deepening one of the world’s largest state-backed semiconductor bets.
The new funding lifts total public support to ¥2.6 trillion, or about $16.3 billion, through March 2027. Rapidus remains central to Tokyo’s effort to rebuild domestic 2nm chip production for AI workloads and advanced computing.
The move also tightens Japan’s broader technology push around supply chain resilience and sovereign semiconductor capacity.
According to Bloomberg, the latest capital will support Rapidus’ development work tied to Fujitsu, one of the startup’s earliest targeted customers.
The Economy Ministry said an external committee reviewed the Hokkaido foundry and approved its technical progress before the subsidy release.
Rapidus, launched in 2022, is building out a domestic 2nm manufacturing line with technology cooperation from IBM. The company still targets mass production in 2027.
The project also carries backing from major Japanese corporates, including Toyota, Sony, and SoftBank, reinforcing its strategic importance beyond pure commercial returns.
Tokyo’s funding pace shows how AI infrastructure demand now overlaps with national industrial policy. Advanced nodes increasingly underpin cloud compute, robotics, and high-performance AI inference.
The additional subsidy also supports design-related work involving Fujitsu and IBM Japan through NEDO programs.
That expands the project from fabrication into a fuller domestic semiconductor design stack, a critical step for AI chip independence.
Japan’s push comes as governments seek alternatives to concentrated foundry exposure in Taiwan and South Korea. For Tokyo, the Rapidus buildout doubles as economic security policy.
The 2nm target places Rapidus directly in competition with leading global foundries serving AI chip demand, where process leadership determines power efficiency and model performance.
For crypto markets, the development matters because AI data-center expansion increasingly overlaps with GPU supply, mining hardware innovation, and tokenized compute infrastructure.
As Bloomberg reported, the latest review focused on execution milestones at the Hokkaido site, where Tokyo wants proof the 2027 manufacturing deadline remains on track.
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