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PRIVACY
Opinion

Why Boris Johnson needs to intervene on Chinese ownership of Newport Wafer Fab

The Newport-based chip maker can become a key player in the role of fast-charging electric vehicle charging points

(Image: Matthew Horwood)

It is nearly year a since one of Wales’ leading technology companies, Newport Wafer Fab (NWF), was acquired by Chinese-owned firm Nexperia.

The Amsterdam-based tech firm, part of Shanghai listed Wingtech, bought NWF in a reported £63m deal having previously had a minority 15% stake and a clause giving it the right to acquire the entire business in the event of customer supply issues.

It was positioned as a deal safeguarding 500 jobs - yes true - but was it in the best interests of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy and an asset of arguably national strategic importance remaining in º£½ÇÊÓÆµ ownership?

On that, the answer is a resounding no.

With the era of unfettered globalisation stalling, with increasing geopolitical tensions, we will see a dash to even greater sovereign production security - from food and energy to technology.

In a way reshoring and closer to home supply chains - although due to the complexity of materials and components in many products it will mean that no state can be truly self-sufficient - could also help reduce emissions.

But where does a chip making facility in Newport, which over the years has gone through numerous boom and bust ownership cycles, fit into this narrative?

The business was acquired by Nexperia from a management buyout buy-in team (Neptune Six) that had itself bought the fab in 2018 from German tech giant Infineon; which after all operated as it a closed fab and not an open access operation allowing others firms to use it for their chip production requirements - a business model that would presently fail a strategic national importance test.