China-Semiconductor Industry/Supply Chain/US Expert
FILE: Beijing, China - Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Aerial shots of city view
FILE: China - Exact Location and Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
2. Various of chip production line
Beijing, China- Aug 31, 2023 (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
3. SOUNDBITE (English) John Neuffer, president, U.S. Semiconductor Industry Association (partially overlaid with shots 4-7):
"The reality is, we want to spend more time coming out here. I plan on coming here more often, and so do my colleagues. And I know that leadership of our industry is increasingly returning to China, and we think that's a very good sign. China is very, very important to our industry. It's a huge part of our supply chain -- the supply chain that exists in China, but also it's a very large customer base for us."
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
FILE: China - Exact Location and Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
4. Various of robotic arms in operation, production line for integrated circuit
5. Researcher observing wafer through microscope
6. Chip production in progress; machine operating
7. Chips on display
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
8. Various of production line of semi-conductor
Beijing, China- Aug 31, 2023 (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
9. SOUNDBITE (English) John Neuffer, president, U.S. Semiconductor Industry Association (partially overlaid with shot 10/ending with shot 11):
"All these global supply chains developed over decades for good reason. They're the most efficient and innovative way of manufacturing and designing semiconductors. If one country did try to move towards the whole supply chain internally, it would be prohibitively expensive and I think you would see a decline in innovation. No one company, no one country can do it."
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
FILE: China - Exact Location and Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
10. Various of semiconductor production in progress
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
11. Various of machine operating
12. Production line of semi-conductor, worker
The CEO of the U.S. Semiconductor Industry Association said that China is crucial to the industry's supply chain, which cannot be independently managed by any single country or company.
Association President John Neuffer's comments came just after U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo wrapped her visit to China from Aug 27-30. Despite demanding a level playing field, Raimondo declared that the U.S. would continue to sell chips to China but would "never sell its sophisticated and powerful chips" to the country.
Nonetheless, the Chinese mainland accounts for some 15 percent of microchip manufacturing, and according to Neuffer, that portion is set to grow.
"We want to spend more time coming out here. I plan on coming here more often, and so do my colleagues. And I know that leadership of our industry is increasingly returning to China, and we think that's a very good sign. China is very, very important to our industry. It's a huge part of our supply chain -- the supply chain that exists in China, but also it's a very large customer base for us," said the association president.
He also noted his view that global cooperation is the most efficient approach for semiconductor production to prevent massive cost hikes and innovative stagnation.
"All these global supply chains developed over decades for good reason. They're the most efficient and innovative way of manufacturing and designing semiconductors. If one country did try to move towards the whole supply chain internally, it would be prohibitively expensive and I think you would see a decline in innovation. No one company, no one country can do it," said Neuffer.
China-Semiconductor Industry/Supply Chain/US Expert
Dateline : Aug 31, 2023/File
Location : China
Duration : 1'19
FILE: Beijing, China - Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Aerial shots of city view
FILE: China - Exact Location and Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
2. Various of chip production line
Beijing, China- Aug 31, 2023 (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
3. SOUNDBITE (English) John Neuffer, president, U.S. Semiconductor Industry Association (partially overlaid with shots 4-7):
"The reality is, we want to spend more time coming out here. I plan on coming here more often, and so do my colleagues. And I know that leadership of our industry is increasingly returning to China, and we think that's a very good sign. China is very, very important to our industry. It's a huge part of our supply chain -- the supply chain that exists in China, but also it's a very large customer base for us."
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
FILE: China - Exact Location and Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
4. Various of robotic arms in operation, production line for integrated circuit
5. Researcher observing wafer through microscope
6. Chip production in progress; machine operating
7. Chips on display
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
8. Various of production line of semi-conductor
Beijing, China- Aug 31, 2023 (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
9. SOUNDBITE (English) John Neuffer, president, U.S. Semiconductor Industry Association (partially overlaid with shot 10/ending with shot 11):
"All these global supply chains developed over decades for good reason. They're the most efficient and innovative way of manufacturing and designing semiconductors. If one country did try to move towards the whole supply chain internally, it would be prohibitively expensive and I think you would see a decline in innovation. No one company, no one country can do it."
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
FILE: China - Exact Location and Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
10. Various of semiconductor production in progress
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
11. Various of machine operating
12. Production line of semi-conductor, worker
The CEO of the U.S. Semiconductor Industry Association said that China is crucial to the industry's supply chain, which cannot be independently managed by any single country or company.
Association President John Neuffer's comments came just after U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo wrapped her visit to China from Aug 27-30. Despite demanding a level playing field, Raimondo declared that the U.S. would continue to sell chips to China but would "never sell its sophisticated and powerful chips" to the country.
Nonetheless, the Chinese mainland accounts for some 15 percent of microchip manufacturing, and according to Neuffer, that portion is set to grow.
"We want to spend more time coming out here. I plan on coming here more often, and so do my colleagues. And I know that leadership of our industry is increasingly returning to China, and we think that's a very good sign. China is very, very important to our industry. It's a huge part of our supply chain -- the supply chain that exists in China, but also it's a very large customer base for us," said the association president.
He also noted his view that global cooperation is the most efficient approach for semiconductor production to prevent massive cost hikes and innovative stagnation.
"All these global supply chains developed over decades for good reason. They're the most efficient and innovative way of manufacturing and designing semiconductors. If one country did try to move towards the whole supply chain internally, it would be prohibitively expensive and I think you would see a decline in innovation. No one company, no one country can do it," said Neuffer.
ID : 8341311
Published : 2023-09-07 17:28
Last Modified : 2023-09-07 21:03:15
Source : China Central Television (CCTV)
Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland
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