UT Austin Selected To Help Lead National Expansion of Semiconductor Workforce
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The University of Texas at Austin has been tapped to spearhead the southern node of the National Network for Microelectronics Education (NNME South), a critical initiative aimed at bridging the formidable talent gap plaguing the U.S. semiconductor industry. This move, announced in early June 2026, positions UT Austin Texas Institute for Electronics (TIE) at the nexus of a 10-state consortium involving over 100 partners, charged with cultivating skilled workers in America's most semiconductor-dense region. The collaboration seeks to fill a projected deficit of 115,000 new jobs by decade's end, ensuring domestic production capacity can meet burgeoning demand. This national push for workforce development underscores the high stakes of the CHIPS and Science Act, enacted in 2022, which earmarks $52.7 billion for semiconductor research, manufacturing, and a dedicated $13 billion for training to bolster U.S. supply chain resilience against geopolitical vulnerabilities. Texas, already a national leader with the second-largest semiconductor workforce and top exporter status for 14 consecutive years, has been at the forefront, pouring over $1.25 billion into its Texas Semiconductor Innovation Fund (TSIF) since 2023. These investments, alongside commitments from industry giants like Samsung Austin Semiconductor, are critical to de-risk a supply chain still reeling from past disruptions and intense global competition. Looking ahead, the NNME South node will rapidly scale existing programs like UT Austin Master of Science in Engineering in Semiconductor Science and Engineering, which launched in Fall 2025 with support from Samsung. Expect to see accelerated curriculum development, expanded experiential learning, and tighter integration between educational institutions and employers across the region, which includes states like Florida, Georgia, and New Mexico. The success of this sprawling, federally-backed network will be a bellwether for America's broader ambition to reclaim semiconductor manufacturing dominance and secure its technological future.