A global push to increase energy
efficiency and cut consumption costs is
boosting the prospects of CamSemi, a fabless
semiconductor company targeting the power
integrated circuit (IC) market.
Cambridge Semiconductor has developed innovative
single chip ICs which improve off-line (mains)
power conversion efficiency and offer performance
enhancements.
They can reduce the size, weight and manufacturing
costs for power-supply units used in a range
of electronic consumer goods from laptops
to mobile phones. The company is also working
on ICs for incorporation into designs for
environmentally friendly low-energy fluorescent
lamps which would lower running costs and
provide a more consistent light output.
CamSemi, founded in 2000 as a spinout from
Cambridge University, has been recognised
as a rising star in the power IC market.
It was recently voted as the company most
likely to join the ranks of ARM and Cambridge
Silicon Radio, two celebrated successes
from the technology hotspot of Cambridge.
Scottish Equity Partners first invested
in CamSemi in 2003 as part of a £3.75
million funding round and the company has
now raised a total of £7 million.
“CamSemi has a very strong competitive
position and technology that addresses a
significant range of applications over a
number of major market opportunities,”
said Andrew Davison, a Director in SEP’s
Information Technology Group.
“They are on course to become a market
leader in intelligent single chip ICs for
energy-efficient power conversion.”
The company is led by chief executive David
Baillie, who has a 20-year history in senior
positions in the international semiconductor
industry.
He has hired Trevor Gainey from LSI Logic
to take charge of product quality and reliability,
and has recruited Nigel Heather as Vice-President
Engineering from SiGe Semiconductor, a leading
supplier of single chip ICs for new wireless
applications.
The company is working with leading manufacturers
in the Far East and Europe to build demand
for its planned products and expects first
revenues in 2006.
“With the backing of supportive investors,
we have continued to attract top class people
as we gear up for our first product launch”
Baillie said. “We’re providing
superior solutions for off-line power conversion
into a multi-billion dollar global market
which is urgently seeking ways to crack
current limitations in power IC performance
and we have the solutions they need.”
CamSemi’s patented technology has
numerous power applications although initially
it will develop products for high-volume
power supplies and lighting applications.
The target power supply segment is estimated
to be worth over $2 billion in power semiconductor
content and the portion of this served by
CamSemi’s products at $635 million.
Products are manufactured in commercial
foundries, offering significant advantages
in terms of costs and scalability of production.
CamSemi is emerging as a leader in its
field at a time when governments from Washington
to Beijing are introducing measures aimed
at conserving energy. President George Bush
introduced a One-Watt Power Initiative which
specifies that all federal government purchases
must have a one-watt standby power while
the state of California has introduced a
mandatory efficiency standard for all external
power supplies.
The California move is significant as it
is the largest market in the US for power
supplies and will encourage wider compliance.
Other US states are following suit and similar
moves are being made in China under its
Sustainable Energy Program and also in Australia.
Measures like these signpost a future where
energy-efficiency is an increasingly significant
market driver, and where companies like
CamSemi are in a prime position to lead
the way in helping to ensure that energy
supply can keep up with ever increasing
demand.