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Al Gore

At SEMICON West 2020, the Honorable Al Gore, former U.S. Vice President and recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize for environmental activism, commented on the world being in the midst of a “sustainability revolution.” Just what did he mean by that, and why bring that message to us? The answer is that he believes the digital transformation wields the magnitude of the agricultural and industrial revolutions, but with the exponential speed that the semiconductor industry created and enabled. Ok, that would put him in the right place… SEMICON West.Among a rich lineup of speakers to mark the 50th anniversary of the event – and 50 years of the semiconductor industry facilitating the innovation of the Information Age -- Gore joined other icons in their fields who graced the virtual stage for our featured keynotes. Each analyzed how microchip advances are critical to solving some of the world’s greatest challenges.As host of the conference, I had the privilege of introducing Gore; Gary Dickerson, President and CEO of Applied Materials; and, Dr. John Kelly III, Executive Vice President and Director of IBM Research, along with other renowned speakers. Their insights seemed especially timely for how our global supply chain can help to build a more sustainable future. Following are a few of the highlights from their discussions. Al Gore – The Planet Faces Existential CrisisIn his keynote conversation with Greenbiz editorial director Heather Clancy kicking off SEMICON West 2020, Gore emphasized that digital technology advances – and in particular microchip innovation – provide the greatest opportunities to overcome the world’s most epic challenges. Chip breakthroughs will be the cutting edge of what he called the rapidly growing sustainability revolution to improve energy efficiency, reduce our reliance on fossil fuels, and optimize the performance of renewable energy generated by solar, wind, and electric battery sources.“We face an inflection point as we rely more on data and communications technology, particularly in areas like cloud computing and artificial intelligence,” Gore said. “Industry is aware of this and working on it, but this meeting (SEMICON West 2020) with your present leadership marks a real turning point. It’s something to be proud of, something to be celebrated. It’s what gives me hope.”Citing Moore’s Law and enormous strides made in chip efficiency and effectiveness, Gore said that within two years smart chips will make everything from solar panels and batteries to renewable energy plants and electric vehicles to be both cost- and performance-competitive with traditional energy sources. Afterwards, renewable energy will be more attractive. Gore urged the energy-intensive semiconductor industry to shift to more renewable power sources for manufacturing. To meet this challenge, Gore encouraged the industry to embrace strategies for “step changes”: First, collaborate and share best practices more transparently across the entire microelectronics value chain. Examples already abound where “cutting-edge apps, AI, and deep learning reduced data server energy use significantly without hardware changes,” he said. Second, reduce electricity required to manufacture smarter and smaller semiconductors. Gore encouraged “all of the equipment manufacturers to work together to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide emissions in manufacturing these advanced semiconductors.” Third, follow the lead of a growing number of companies that “continue decarbonizing the power supply on which data centers operate,” he said. Fourth, work with government through the Science Based Target Initiative, which sets decarbonization limits that keep global temperatures no more than two degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels. Finally, rely on “diversity of thought” and “collective thinking” when innovating for the digital future. Research and experience prove that different points of view lead to better decisions. The technology industry has made progress in workforce diversity, but more can be done, Gore said. This last point plays to our collaborative strengths as SEMI members and an industry. “It is just unbearable to imagine a future generation living with the kinds of consequences scientists tell us would ensue if we don’t heed their warnings and solve this crisis,” Gore said, drawing parallels to the COVID-19 pandemic. “We have to accept the situation and make sure we do everything we can. I am inspired by this industry’s leadership, innovation, and spirit to rise to the challenge and make a difference.”Gary Dickerson – Making Possible A Better FutureTo ensure another 50 years of accelerating growth and innovation, today’s semiconductor leaders must share a deep commitment to a more sustainable and just supply chain industrywide.“The first thing we need to do is decouple our growth from environmental impacts,” Dickerson said in his keynote. “Our responsibility as leaders is to leave the world a better place.”Dickerson said that while he firmly believes the explosion of processing and storage data has “the potential to change the world,” the downside is that it also has the potential to rapidly expand our industry’s carbon footprint. Without dramatic change, electrical usage will continue to rise as machines generate and consume more data, compute performance progresses, and workloads from the edge to the cloud grow.“It will be impossible to create neural networks (using AI) with the rate of today’s power consumption,” Dickerson said, noting that more improvements must be made in the performance and efficiency of semiconductor devices, architectures, structures, materials, and advanced packaging.Dickerson urged the electronics ecosystem to “permanently think and act differently” by breaking down communication barriers among systems integrators, equipment suppliers, design and manufacturing service providers, and other industry players. Sharing learnings and best practices will be vital to this change, he said. Dickerson unveiled SuCCESS2030 (Supply Chain Certification for Environmental and Social Sustainability) – Applied Materials’ 10-year roadmap for creating a more sustainable supply chain – during his talk. Under the SuCCESS2030 initiative, Applied Materials will hold its suppliers to the company’s own high standards for committing to renewable energy and workforce diversity by setting targets such as: Reducing supply chain carbon emissions 15 percent in four years by relying more on intermodal shipping than air freight Transitioning the supply chain to recycled content packaging, with a target of 80 percent by the end of 2023 Eliminating phosphate-based, pre-treatment of metal surfaces by 2024 Working with trade associations like SEMI to develop diversity and inclusion strategies to increase underrepresented minorities in the workplace Dickerson said that deeper and more open partnerships between Applied Materials and its customers and suppliers have led to a number of promising outcomes. Examples include hardware and software upgrades, product and service optimizations, and improvements in chip architectures that increased throughput density for higher system performance while decreasing power and chemical consumption, costs, and space requirements. What’s more, Applied Materials recently introduced its Selective Tungsten Process Technology, which uses new materials, atomic-level designs, and ultra-clean rooms to improve the performance of interconnected transistors while lowering power consumption.Dickerson said the COVID-19 pandemic has awakened the world to the power of digital technologies that make it possible to communicate, collaborate, and share data across the globe while sheltering in place. “When I think of the world’s grand challenges, it’s clear the semiconductor industry has a critical role to play,” Dickerson said. “I strongly believe we’re in a position to shape the future and leave the world a better place.”John E. Kelly III – 50 Years That Changed The World … And We’re Just Getting Started During the past half century, semiconductors have given rise to essentially every major technology advance, Kelly said in his keynote. Microchip innovation has played a central role in rocketing humans to the moon, simulating nuclear weapons on a supercomputer, connecting people to nearly everything via mobile devices, and keeping people alive with pacemakers and other electronic medical devices.The strides in innovation have been staggering. In 1970, a semiconductor chip featured a few thousand components. Today, that number stands at 50 billion. Breakthroughs in everything from materials and chemicals to polishing, processes and interconnectivity have driven gains in power-efficiency and performance while reducing chip size.Moore’s Law is far from dead. Paraphrasing Winston Churchill, Kelly said, semiconductor innovation today is not at “the beginning of the end, but at the end of the beginning, and the best is yet to come – driven by extreme collaboration and extreme innovation to solve the world’s biggest challenges.”Kelly said he believes technology is the only answer to the onslaught of grand challenges confronting societies and people today, including air and water pollution, climate change, diminishing natural resources, storm-related disasters, food supply shortages, and the COVID-19 pandemic.Kelly lamented that the world’s response to COVID-19 illustrates that “not much has changed” since the Spanish Flu crisis a century ago. The same technology – masks – remains the primary defense. “I think if we had used digital technologies and computer modeling earlier on, we could have detected the spread of this flu” to minimize its impact, Kelly said.Today’s computer modeling and analytics capabilities aren’t quite ready yet to tackle such complex problems as pandemics, global warming, or water contamination. However, Kelly said, several game-changing technologies – all powered by semiconductors – are emerging as promising answers to our most daunting challenges.“It’s all about the data, and artificial intelligence is the way forward – it’s analytics on steroids, and many new devices will be required to drive AI at the scale of these problems,” Kelly said. “The second technology revolves around not just cloud computing but edge computing and cloud at the edge. Data will be generated in enormous amounts at the edge, which is where we will need to store and compute the data. The next is Quantum Computing. Frankly, we do not have enough computing power yet to look at some of the biggest challenges we have.”All these advances will present new challenges for the semiconductor industry, such as developing new materials, new chip architectures and new mapping structures for AI-embedded devices to reach their full potential.With many of these disruptive innovations too large for any company to solve singlehandedly, Kelly advised industry players to form more “radical partnerships.”“Extreme collaboration and extreme innovation will drive solutions to all these world challenges,” Kelly said. “The best is yet to come.”Radical partnerships… Sustainable revolutions… Extreme innovation… It’s been 50 years of SEMICON West, but it sounds like we’re just getting the real magic started. Like John Kelly said and the other keynoters emphasized, the best is yet to come.Dave Anderson is president of SEMI Americas.
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Humanity has survived almost unimaginable challenges over the past 5,000 years of documented human history. From war, famine and natural disasters to the first global pandemic in the last 100 years, more often than not, people have relied on one another to survive and thrive again. As the industry association representing the global microelectronics industry, SEMI has similarly made collaboration and community integral to the fabric of its organization. From helping members to succeed through the COVID-19 pandemic to facilitating member-driven industry standards around environmental health and safety, materials, and manufacturing capabilities, this approach shows members that standing together is better than standing alone.On the eve of the 50th annual SEMICON West (July 20-23, 2020) — the first virtual edition in SEMI’s history — I spoke with SEMI’s vice president of technology communities, Michael Ciesinski, about the role of SEMI in tackling big challenges through an active member community intent on solving problems through collaboration.SEMI: How long have you worked with SEMI and in what capacity?Ciesinski: In January 2016, I started my second tour at SEMI when FlexTech, the industry consortium I’d been leading, became SEMI’s first strategic partner. Nearly two years into that role, SEMI President CEO Ajit Manocha asked me to form Technology Communities to engage members with common interests. After FlexTech, we brought on the Fab Owners Alliance, then MEMS Sensors Industry Group (MSIG), and later the Electronic System Design Alliance (ESD Alliance).SEMI now has more than 20 communities in all, including Smart MedTech, Smart Data AI, Smart Manufacturing, Electronic Materials, and Integrated Packaging, Assembly and Test.SEMI: What is your role with Technology Communities — and how do members stand to benefit?Ciesinski: The leadership of Technology Communities ensures that SEMI’s benefits and services align to our members’ interests so we can provide member benefits that matter most. This spans forming communities where people hold common interests (e.g., advanced packaging) to facilitating standards that will promote intelligence in manufacturing (e.g., data standards for AI and machine learning) as well as providing R D funding.I’m especially proud that over the past three years, SEMI has brought more than $40 million in R D funding to our members, with most grants in the $500,000-$1 million range. We’ve been especially successful in securing funding in flexible hybrid electronics (FHE) through U.S. Army Research Laboratories (ARL), a model we first developed through FlexTech.Two recent recipients of FHE funding, GE Research and ITN Energy Systems, show how the grants are spawning partnership opportunities among commercial enterprises, R D organizations and universities. In developing lightweight, non-invasive wearables, including a human-performance sweat-monitoring patch that remotely analyzes sweat to detect hydration levels and other vital signs, GE Research is using key components such as sensors and lightweight batteries in its designs.ITN Energy Systems designed a flexible all-solid-state lithium battery that’s printed on light, flexible substrates to power small and incredibly thin applications.Universities are also benefiting by plugging into the SEMI ecosystem. In fact, 40-50 percent of funded projects are seeding commercialization by universities. This is another validation that SEMI’s collaborative, community approach to microelectronics is working.SEMI: Position, Timing and Navigation (PNT) is another hot area where SEMI has secured ARL funding. What makes this funding different and why is it important?Ciesinski: The PNT grant makes ARL funding available to the MEMS Sensors Industry Group (MSIG) members through SEMI for the first time. If you’ve ever lost GPS signal while coming out of a tunnel, you know how frustrating that is. For us, that’s an inconvenience, but for a healthcare worker in a remote location who’s waiting for a delivery of medication by drone, it could be life-critical. While that’s just one example of why we need PNT to operate when GPS isn’t available, I can imagine dozens of other important dual-use cases, including autonomous driving.SEMI: How else do Technology Communities benefit under SEMI?Ciesinski: Technology Communities need access to diverse resources to spur continuous innovation. Electronic Materials Group participants, for example, need to stay informed on regulations coming out of Asia, the U.S. and Europe that may affect their businesses. Where else other than SEMI can like-minded stakeholders congregate with people up and down the supply chain to determine whether industry-wide action is needed on regulation?SEMI: What is the importance of SEMI’s global footprint?Ciesinski: I’ve worked with many associations and managed major industry consortia. The clear advantage of SEMI is our global footprint. And that’s vital because microelectronics is a global industry involving a multitude of stakeholders that play essential roles in the supply chain.Let’s say you want to discuss EU regulations on hazardous chemicals. Rather than decipher these complexities alone, you can pick up the phone to speak with someone on SEMI’s European team to learn what’s critical.What if you’d like more information on the 20-plus new fabs that are going up in China? You can explore that question with our SEMI China or SEMI Industry Research and Statistics teams.SEMI: How has SEMI evolved over the years?Ciesinski: SEMI has a long history of providing what the industry cares about. We started in trade shows and pivoted to industry standards. We began with small silicon wafers and wafer carriers, and now within the span of 50 years we’re working on data-format standards that will support the application of AI and machine learning (ML) in the semiconductor industry.While highly varied today, data-format standards will help component manufacturers refine processes to create more efficient solutions. This ARL-funded program, which pairs SEMI members with the grant recipient, Cornell University, may offer dramatic gains in the productivity of semiconductor manufacturing.SEMI: How does SEMI’s approach to COVID-19 reflect core values of collaboration and community?Ciesinski: Together with Ajit Manocha, CMO Terry Tsao and other team members at SEMI, we pulled together a task force to help SEMI members navigate the pandemic.We tapped two existing groups, Environment, Health and Safety (EHS) and Information Technology Leadership (ITL) from the start, documenting their strategic and tactical approaches to help all members through the COVID-19 resource section of our website. The EHS section provides tips on facilities and meetings, employee policies, business travel and communications, while the ITL section lists insights on computing hardware for staff, licensing, networks, security and employee policies.Our EHS leadership team, which includes Entegris, Axcelis, Versum, and Intel, immediately started sharing best practices for sanitizing facilities. As a result of team meetings, SEMI EHS shared best practices on keeping the workforce remote and guidelines for returning people to work safely. From securing PPE and safeguarding employees and visitors by performing thermal scanning to outlining communications around potential employee exposures, EHS has provided meaningful resources for the benefit of all members.SEMI also took immediate steps in the area of advocacy. Our advocacy team in Washington, D.C., together with regional SEMI presidents around the world, have ensured that semiconductor facilities were and still are considered essential businesses in the U.S., Europe and Asia. That’s because microelectronics are foundational to fighting the pandemic.Microfluidics are critical to the Reverse Transcription (RT) Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) tests most commonly used for COVID-19. Sensors are embedded in the pulse oximeters that allow patients and healthcare professionals to monitor a vital rubric: oxygen saturation level. If oxygen saturation level drops into the low 90 percentiles or below, it may be time to go to the hospital for treatment.Microcontroller units are essential components in a wide range of hospital equipment, including the ventilators that may make the difference between life and death in the most seriously ill patients.SEMI: How can the ingenuity realized through microelectronics continue to help us tackle other big problems? Ciesinski: We have MEMS and sensors to thank for distributed intelligence, giving us the ability to put sensors anywhere, locally based in the field or in the packaging house.Food production is a prime example. Leveraging miniaturized wirelessly connected sensors, we can trace food through the entire production lifecycle, from the seed in the ground to the food in the warehouse and, ultimately, to the product that lands on the table.From larger enterprise such as IBM Food Trust to small startups, we’re using MEMS and sensors to improve crop yields so we can feed a human population that’s growing each year.There’s a sustainability piece as well. We’re using MEMS and sensors to reduce the amount of fertilizer or other nutrients or chemicals in the soil. That’s good for the environment and for the agricultural workers who labor in the fields.MEMS and sensors can also condense the time it takes to perform a specific task, conserving human resources.SEMI: Where do you think SEMI will go in the next decade?Ciesinski: Ten years from now, I believe we will still have our global footprint in place. I expect it will expand, particularly in Asia.We may also expand into new areas such as Latin America and Central America, which would provide at least two major benefits: People working in microelectronics would, I hope, have access to better quality of life. And diversifying the supply chain would allow nations and regions to have more control over the products they need, from PPE to medications, which may help us to better manage through the next pandemic.I am also hopeful that SEMI will be on the leading edge of helping our members communicate in much different fashion from what we have today. We’re already expanding beyond the paradigm of in-person meetings for standards meetings and conferences. As we move forward, I think we’ll see a hybrid solution to doing business, combining in-person meetings with virtual conferences and digital content that’s available 24/7.Whatever changes we see in SEMI, I’m confident that we will continue to see a global footprint in an industry association that prioritizes connections among members.Engage in the SEMI experience at upcoming SEMICON WestRegister today to hear from keynote speakers such as environmental advocate and former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, futurist and author Steve Brown, and IBM Research senior vice president and director Dr. John E. Kelly III, and Lea Gabrielle, special envoy of the Global Engagement Center for the U.S. State Department, at SEMICON West , July 20-23, 2020. Content will be live streamed and available on-demand. Michael Ciesinski is vice president of Technology Communities for SEMI, the global microelectronics industry association, appointed in August 2018. At SEMI, he directs activity for more than 20 industry groups, oversees the association’s R D funding program, and develops new technology initiatives to serve SEMI’s 2,400 members. Prior to re-joining SEMI, Ciesinski was president/CEO of FlexTech Alliance, an industry consortium focused on new methods of creating electronics. From 1995-2008, Ciesinski served in a similar role at the U.S. Display Consortium (USDC), a private/public partnership chartered with building the infrastructure for electronic display and flexible electronics manufacturing. Both FlexTech and USDC annually sponsor multimillion dollar technology development programs and provide industry technical, financial and market services. Ciesinski is a graduate of the University of Albany, NY, and a former member of the Dean’s Advisory Committee at California Polytechnic State University.Maria Vetrano is a PR consultant at SEMI.
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