Taiwan Cultivates Young Overseas Chip Talent with Summer Camps, University Courses

Students dressed in white protective suit and a face mask visit a clean room as part of a summer camp organized by US chip designer Synopsys with the goal to attract more youth to Taiwan's semiconductor industry, in Hsinchu, Taiwan July 18, 2025. (Reuters)
Students dressed in white protective suit and a face mask visit a clean room as part of a summer camp organized by US chip designer Synopsys with the goal to attract more youth to Taiwan's semiconductor industry, in Hsinchu, Taiwan July 18, 2025. (Reuters)
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Taiwan Cultivates Young Overseas Chip Talent with Summer Camps, University Courses

Students dressed in white protective suit and a face mask visit a clean room as part of a summer camp organized by US chip designer Synopsys with the goal to attract more youth to Taiwan's semiconductor industry, in Hsinchu, Taiwan July 18, 2025. (Reuters)
Students dressed in white protective suit and a face mask visit a clean room as part of a summer camp organized by US chip designer Synopsys with the goal to attract more youth to Taiwan's semiconductor industry, in Hsinchu, Taiwan July 18, 2025. (Reuters)

Dressed in a white protective suit and face mask, Nicolas Chueh listened intently as a guide introduced a series of silver machines used in manufacturing Taiwan's cutting-edge semiconductors. The 16-year-old was among students from eight countries at the summer camp staged to raise interest in Taiwan's most vital industry amid a fast-declining birth rate that could leave tens of thousands of critical jobs vacant.

"I myself really enjoy playing video games. So I'm really just always using these semiconductor products," said Chueh, whose parents enrolled him after he expressed interest.

The camp, organized by US chip design software firm Synopsys, is among several such events staged by chip companies and Taiwanese universities in recent years as demand for semiconductors, which power most electronics and AI servers, surges across the globe.

But for the first time this year, Synopsys, which has significant operations in Taiwan to be closer to the semiconductor supply chain, hosted the events both in Mandarin and English as Taiwan searches for overseas talent.

"There is an urgent need to strengthen STEM education from an early age," said Robert Li, Synopsys's Taiwan chairman, who believes the camps can increase interest in the chip industry and help prime some of its future leaders.

"That is why we are launching this initiative in Taiwan, where its strength in semiconductors meets the challenge of demographic decline. Taken together, it is clear we must act here first."

Given limitations posed by Taiwan's ageing population, Synopsys is also considering hosting camps internationally to spur interest in chip making and designing, he added. The company charges T$33,000 ($1,103) for the English versions and T$10,900 for Mandarin.

Chueh, a dual Taiwan-Belgian national who lives in Singapore, said he views semiconductors as an attractive career choice.

"I want to lean into it to some extent because I think it will be crucial in the future with AI."

SLUMPING BIRTH RATE

Taiwan, which has a population of around 23 million, holds outsized influence over the global semiconductor supply chain, thanks to its chip companies such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, the world's largest contract chipmaker, MediaTek, and UMC.

Any decline in the industry poses an existential threat to Taiwan, which faces the threat of invasion from Beijing and draws much of its global significance from the chip behemoths.

But job openings in the semiconductor sector have risen from 19,401 in the second quarter of 2020 to 33,725 in the same period this year, according to 104 Corporation, a local human resources firm.

The industry is grappling with a shortage of both highly skilled professionals, such as IC design and semiconductor R&D engineers, and essential production staff, including operators and assembly technicians.

Filling those jobs locally is becoming harder each year as Taiwan's annual number of births has dropped from over 210,000 in 2014 to around 135,000 in 2024, according to government statistics. STEM graduates have also fallen by around 15% in that period, Ministry of Education statistics showed.

"Growth in Taiwan's semiconductor industry has been quite rapid, faster than what our schools can produce in terms of engineering talent each year," said Leuh Fang, chairman of Vanguard International Semiconductor, a Taiwan-based chipmaker affiliated with TSMC.

'THE FUTURE WORKFORCE'

Last year, the National Taiwan University launched a global undergraduate semiconductor program for foreign students, which included Mandarin courses to help them reach the proficiency needed to stay and work in Taiwan.

The program now enrolls over 40 students from more than 10 countries.

TSMC also began looking toward foreign talent by throwing its weight behind a program in Germany’s Saxony state, which would send German students to study for a semester at Taiwanese universities before interning at TSMC.

Other initiatives are attempting to create interest among children as young as 10.

Taiwan's National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University (NYCU) launched an outreach program in July, backed by TSMC, aimed at making chip science fun through interactive teaching tools and online games.

"The issue everyone is discussing now is where the future workforce will come from," said NYCU President Chi-Hung Lin.

"If they're curious now, they won't reject it later and some may even grow to like this kind of work."



World Bank: Saudi Arabia Presents Global Model for Responsible AI Innovation in Digital Learning

The Saudi flag. File/Asharq Al-Awsat
The Saudi flag. File/Asharq Al-Awsat
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World Bank: Saudi Arabia Presents Global Model for Responsible AI Innovation in Digital Learning

The Saudi flag. File/Asharq Al-Awsat
The Saudi flag. File/Asharq Al-Awsat

The World Bank has documented Saudi Arabia's experience in utilizing AI in learning, affirming that the AI Sandbox for Digital Learning (AISB) initiative represents a pioneering national model for countries seeking to advance responsible innovation and improve the quality of digital learning, SPA reported.

This came in a study published by the World Bank titled: "AI Sandbox for Digital Learning in Saudi Arabia: Driving Socio-Economic Impact through AI Innovation in Digital Learning." The study reviewed the Saudi experience as an integrated model that combines practical experimentation, capacity building, governance, and the orchestration of an innovation ecosystem within a single national platform led by the National eLearning Centre (NeLC).

The study highlighted that the initiative actively contributes to enhancing digital learning quality, developing human capabilities, and boosting national workforce readiness. Furthermore, it enabled institutions and innovators to develop and test AI solutions within real-world, secure learning environments, directly aligning with the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030 and maximizing the socio-economic impact of innovation in learning.

The study also noted that the Saudi experience transcends the mere testing of technologies; it provides an environment that fosters the generation of evidence-based knowledge, strengthens partnerships, and accelerates the adoption of responsible innovation. Consequently, this helps build a sustainable ecosystem for AI in digital learning.

The World Bank concluded that the Saudi experience has laid a solid foundation to build upon, positioning Saudi Arabia to serve as a regional and international reference point for responsible, evidence-informed innovation.

The AISB, led by NeLC, is implemented within an integrated national ecosystem in partnership with several government institutions.


South Korea's SK Hynix to Invest $64 Billion in Memory Chip Plants

FILE PHOTO: The SK Hynix logo appears in this illustration taken August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: The SK Hynix logo appears in this illustration taken August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/File Photo
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South Korea's SK Hynix to Invest $64 Billion in Memory Chip Plants

FILE PHOTO: The SK Hynix logo appears in this illustration taken August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: The SK Hynix logo appears in this illustration taken August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/File Photo

SK Hynix said it would invest 100 trillion won ($64.38 billion) to build new chip plants, including one for NAND flash memory, as part of a massive South Korean investment drive aimed at spreading returns from the AI boom beyond Seoul.

The projects in the central city of Cheongju outlined on Thursday are included in a broader $2.1 trillion plan unveiled by the chipmaker and its local rival Samsung Electronics this week that also included a new chip cluster in the southwest and existing projects.

The huge capacity buildout by the South Korean chipmakers is a major political win for the country's President Lee Jae Myung, who wants the AI windfall to help revive economies beyond ⁠the Seoul metropolitan area, ⁠though it is stoking fears of a painful reckoning if AI spending cools.

At an event on Thursday attended by Lee, SK Hynix CEO Kwak Noh-jung said the company would spend 80 trillion won to build a new factory for NAND memory chip production by 2029 and 20 trillion won for a chip packaging plant by late 2027 in Cheongju.

The plan to invest 100 trillion won in Cheongju was announced on Monday, but details of the investment were not provided at the time, Reuters reported.

South Korea is hoping the investments will ⁠double the country's memory chip production capacity within five years. Samsung and SK Hynix are the world's largest manufacturers of memory chips alongside US rival Micron.

The investments come as demand from AI hyperscalers has caused a global shortage of all types of memory chips. Prices for both NAND flash memory, a storage chip that retains data even when a device is turned off, and DRAM have soared to historical highs.

SK Hynix shares ended down 15% and Samsung shares closed 9% lower on Thursday, hit by a global selloff in chipmakers as Meta Platforms' plan to sell computing power raised questions over excess AI computing capacity.

Michael Burry, the investor whose successful bets against the US housing market in 2008 were recounted in the movie "The Big Short," expressed caution about the massive South Korean investment plan in a subscriber-only Substack ⁠newsletter on Tuesday, the Wall ⁠Street Journal reported.

The investment drive set off alarm bells for Burry over whether the massive sums of money being poured into AI could ever generate appropriate returns, according to the report, which added that he had made more bearish bets against AI-related stocks.

"I see that as the beginning of the end," he told subscribers.

At the SK Hynix event, Kwak expressed confidence in AI-driven demand for chips.

"While demand for NAND has been increasing and is expected to continue growing in the future, NAND supply is constrained," he said.

SK Hynix said it planned to start construction of the new Cheongju NAND factory, known as M17, next year.

In April, SK Hynix broke ground on the P&T7 fab at Cheongju, a dedicated advanced packaging facility for AI memory, including high-bandwidth memory.

However, the company cautioned in a filing this week that the long-term investment plans could change depending on global chip demand and spending by major customers.

Factors such as delays in selecting and securing construction sites could also cause it to postpone plans, it added.


Microsoft Partners with Singapore's Lightstorm to Build India-Southeast Asia Undersea Cable

FILED - 30 January 2026, Bavaria, Munich: FILE PHOTO - The Microsoft logo can be seen on the Microsoft Germany headquarters building in Munich. Photo: Sven Hoppe/dpa
FILED - 30 January 2026, Bavaria, Munich: FILE PHOTO - The Microsoft logo can be seen on the Microsoft Germany headquarters building in Munich. Photo: Sven Hoppe/dpa
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Microsoft Partners with Singapore's Lightstorm to Build India-Southeast Asia Undersea Cable

FILED - 30 January 2026, Bavaria, Munich: FILE PHOTO - The Microsoft logo can be seen on the Microsoft Germany headquarters building in Munich. Photo: Sven Hoppe/dpa
FILED - 30 January 2026, Bavaria, Munich: FILE PHOTO - The Microsoft logo can be seen on the Microsoft Germany headquarters building in Munich. Photo: Sven Hoppe/dpa

A consortium including Microsoft and telecom startup Lightstorm plans to build a new undersea cable linking India with Malaysia and Singapore as technology firms compete to expand AI and cloud infrastructure in India, one of the world's fastest-growing data markets.

The consortium, whose other members include Tata Communications , Singapore Telecommunications, Singapore's ASEAN Cableship and Japan's NEC Corporation, will construct the I-2SEA cable to support AI, cloud and hyperscale workloads, Reuters quoted the companies as saying on Thursday.

They did not provide additional details including the investment ⁠size.

The network will ⁠span 3,600 km and have landing stations in Machilipatnam in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, where Meta and Alphabet have announced data centers.

The cable is expected to be operational in the fourth quarter of 2029, Lightstorm Group CEO and Managing ⁠Director Amajit Gupta told Reuters in an interview.

The I Squared-backed company currently connects 19 AI and cloud zones across India through terrestrial fiber cable networks, with the new network expected to bring this number up to 29, Gupta said.

India's operational data center capacity could double from the current 1.4 gigawatts by 2027, based on projects under construction, and increase five-fold by 2030 if planned projects are fast-tracked, Macquarie Equity Research ⁠said in ⁠a report last October.

Undersea cables carry roughly 95% of the world's internet traffic. India currently has 17 active submarine cables with a maximum potential capacity of 960 terabits per second, and at least 10 more have been publicly announced, according to TeleGeography, a telecommunications research firm.

Separately, Lightstorm plans to list in India in mid-2027, Gupta said, without disclosing any other details. The company was seeking a valuation of up to $1.5 billion in March, according to a media report.