Intel threw open the doors of its Oregon fabrication facilities for the first time in years, as Washington leans on the sole US designer and manufacturer of advanced chips to counter China's semiconductor ambitions.
Intel granted rare media access to its Oregon semiconductor fabrication operations in June 2026, as the US government relies on the only American company that both designs and manufactures advanced chips domestically to rebuild domestic chipmaking capacity as US-China tensions escalate.
"Intel's Oregon fabs are the most advanced semiconductor manufacturing facilities in the Western Hemisphere, and they are critical to America's technology sovereignty," a company spokesperson said during the tour, which included views of the company's cutting-edge process nodes.
The facility tour comes as Intel and 3DGS announced plans for a $3.3 billion semiconductor substrate manufacturing facility, a key component in the chip packaging supply chain. Intel's Oregon operations span multiple fabrication plants producing chips on advanced process nodes, making it the only site in the US where leading-edge semiconductors are both designed and manufactured under one roof.
Washington's bet on Intel carries billions in implications. The CHIPS and Science Act allocated $52.7 billion to revive US semiconductor manufacturing, with Intel receiving the largest single award — up to $8.5 billion in direct funding and $11 billion in loans. Failure to scale domestic production would leave the US reliant on Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Samsung Electronics for the most advanced chips, a vulnerability China has repeatedly signaled it intends to exploit.
The Oregon Advantage in US Chip Sovereignty
Intel's Oregon campus in Hillsboro serves as the company's primary research and development hub for process technology. The site houses multiple fabrication plants where Intel develops and manufactures chips on its most advanced nodes. Unlike TSMC's Arizona facility or Samsung's Texas plant — both foreign-owned — Intel's Oregon operations are entirely US-owned and operated, giving Washington direct control over the supply chain.
The strategic importance of domestic advanced chip manufacturing has intensified as US-China technology tensions escalate. Export controls on semiconductor equipment and advanced chips have restricted China's access to leading-edge technology, prompting Beijing to accelerate its own domestic chipmaking efforts. Intel's Oregon fabs represent a key pillar of the US response: maintaining a technological lead through domestic production capacity that cannot be disrupted by geopolitical events in Asia.
The $3.3 Billion Substrate Bet
The joint venture with 3DGS to build a $3.3 billion semiconductor substrate facility addresses a critical bottleneck in the chip supply chain. Substrates — the base material onto which semiconductor dies are mounted — have been in short supply globally, constraining production even when fab capacity is available. The new facility will produce advanced substrates for Intel's most sophisticated chips, reducing reliance on Asian suppliers that currently dominate the substrate market.
Intel's foundry business, which manufactures chips for external customers, depends on this supply chain resilience. The company has positioned its foundry services as a geopolitically neutral alternative to TSMC, which operates out of Taiwan — a region China claims as its own territory. Major US technology companies including Amazon, Nvidia, and Qualcomm have expressed interest in diversifying their chip manufacturing away from Taiwan, creating a potential customer base for Intel's foundry.
Investor Implications
Intel shares have been volatile as the company executes its turnaround plan under Chief Executive Officer Pat Gelsinger. The foundry business remains unprofitable, with operating losses of $7 billion in 2024, according to company filings. However, the strategic imperative of domestic chip production gives Intel a government-backed moat that pure financial analysis may understate. If Intel successfully scales its foundry operations, it could capture a share of the $500 billion global semiconductor market that is currently dominated by TSMC and Samsung.
The Oregon facility tour signals confidence in Intel's manufacturing roadmap, but execution risk remains high. Intel has delayed several process node introductions in recent years, and the company's 18A node — expected to restore its process leadership — has not yet entered high-volume production. Investors will watch for customer design wins and yield improvements as key indicators of whether Intel can deliver on its foundry ambitions.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.