Taiwan indispensable to global AI development, says President Lai
Taipei, June 3
President Lai Ching-te on Tuesday hailed the role of Taiwan in global Artificial Intelligence development, underlining how the country demonstrates industrial efficiency and technological capabilities, Focus Taiwan reported.
As per the report by Focus Taiwan, President Lai Ching-te made the remarks on Tuesday at the opening of Computex Taipei.
Highlighting that Taiwan has become indispensable to global AI development, Lai said global tech giants had gathered in Taiwan for this year's Computex, with some of them announcing plans to continue investing in the country, demonstrating confidence in Taiwan's technological capabilities, industrial efficiency and democratic system.
According to Focus Taiwan, Computex, will run through Friday under the theme "AI Together," and features 6,000-plus booths from 1,500 exhibitors representing 33 countries from the world--including Nvidia Corp., Qualcomm Inc. and Intel Corp.
It reported that more than 60,000 visitors have registered to attend the trade show.
Lai in his remarks said that the government welcomes investment from around the world by offering tax incentives, improving the investment environment and promoting a chip-based innovation program aimed at driving next-generation technological advances.
He underlined that Taiwan would maintain peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait, describing the policy as the most responsible commitment to the global supply chain.
"The more the world needs AI, the more it needs a stable, trustworthy and responsible Taiwan," Lai said.
"When AI development enters its next stage, it will require collaboration among like-minded and reliable partners around the world," he added.
In his remarks he also addressed concerns about electricity shortages, noting that said Taiwan's power supply would remain sufficient through 2032 despite rising demand from AI development and that the government would continue promoting its second phase of energy transformation to ensure a stable power supply.
In addition to ensuring adequate power, Lai said the government would provide sufficient water, land and talent resources to meet rapidly growing demand for AI infrastructure, computing capacity and semiconductors, Focus Taiwan reported.
It further mentioned that Lai said Taiwan would continue to pursue technological innovation, strengthen economic resilience and work with international partners in AI development.
— ANI
Reader Comments
Honestly, as an Indian working in tech, I see both sides. Taiwan's efficiency is unmatched, but the China-Taiwan tension keeps everyone on edge. India's "China+1" strategy is already working, we're getting more fab investments. Let's play the long game. 🇮🇳
Taiwan's democratic system is indeed a strength—it creates stability for long-term investment. But why does every news piece from Taipei sound like a sales pitch? The electricity guarantee until 2032 is a big claim for a country that saw blackouts last year. Hope their planning is as advanced as their chips.
Interesting times. As a US-based engineer, I've visited TSMC's fabs in Taiwan—the efficiency is unreal. But geographically it's a risky single point of failure for global AI. India should leverage this: offer stable, democratic, and scalable manufacturing alternatives. The opportunity is massive if we get the policy right.
I appreciate that the President mentioned peace and stability across the strait. That's what every responsible leader should prioritize. But the way some Taiwanese leaders talk, it feels like they're baiting China. India's stance on One China is clear—we want peaceful resolution, not escalation. AI development shouldn't come at the cost of regional stability.
Taiwan's chip industry is amazing, but let's be real—without the US military umbrella, they'd have been swallowed by China years ago. India needs to develop indigenous capabilities. The way global supply chains are weaponizing tech sovereignty, we can't afford to be dependent on anyone, even a friendly country like Taiwan
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