The U.S. is ramping up efforts to secure homegrown semiconductor production, and a major investment in Texas-based Noveon signals this shift. For years, China has maintained a stranglehold on critical electronics components—a vulnerability that's pushing American policy and capital to break free from that dependency. This domestic push isn't just about national security; it ripples through the entire tech ecosystem, including hardware infrastructure that powers blockchain networks and mining operations. As supply chains reshape and production capacity expands stateside, it could reshape costs and availability for the broader Web3 infrastructure sector.
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The U.S. is ramping up efforts to secure homegrown semiconductor production, and a major investment in Texas-based Noveon signals this shift. For years, China has maintained a stranglehold on critical electronics components—a vulnerability that's pushing American policy and capital to break free from that dependency. This domestic push isn't just about national security; it ripples through the entire tech ecosystem, including hardware infrastructure that powers blockchain networks and mining operations. As supply chains reshape and production capacity expands stateside, it could reshape costs and availability for the broader Web3 infrastructure sector.