Gorilla glass maker corning receive chips act funding – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Gorilla Glass maker Corning to receive up to $32 million under CHIPS Act

The announcement comes just days after the EU opened an investigation into Corning.

The announcement comes just days after the EU opened an investigation into Corning.

Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra shown from top down on a shelf with screen on.
Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra shown from top down on a shelf with screen on.
Samsung’s Galaxy S24 is just one of the many phones that use Gorilla Glass.
Photo by Allison Johnson / The Verge
Emma Roth
is a news writer who covers the streaming wars, consumer tech, crypto, social media, and much more. Previously, she was a writer and editor at MUO.

Corning, the maker of Gorilla Glass, is set to receive up to $32 million in funding under the CHIPS and Science Act. In an announcement on Friday, the US Commerce Department said the proposed funding will help Corning increase production of its glass products used in the chip-making process.

The announcement comes just days after the European Commission opened an antitrust investigation into Corning over whether it uses exclusive supply agreements to stifle competition. Both Samsung and Apple use Corning’s ultra-tough alkali-aluminosilicate glass — or Gorilla Glass — on their phones, tablets, and smartwatches.

However, the proposed CHIPS Act funding doesn’t have anything to do with Gorilla Glass. Corning will put the funding toward the production of its High Purity Fused Silica and Extreme Ultra-Low Expansion Glass. As noted in the press release, both types of glass are used in lithography machines and photomasks used to image a chip’s pattern onto a silicon wafer. It will also allow Corning to “scale a novel manufacturing process” in its Canton, New York plant, which is expected to create 130 new manufacturing jobs and more than 175 construction jobs.

Related

Signed by President Joe Biden in 2022, the CHIPS Act is supposed to bolster semiconductor manufacturing in the US. And now, Bloomberg reports that the Biden administration is scrambling to issue final grants as its time in office runs out. The future of the CHIPS Act under President-Elect Donald Trump remains unclear. Last week, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) walked back a statement saying Republicans would “repeal” the legislation, instead saying they would “streamline” it.

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