Kuwait Times

Taiwan chip giant TSMC announces second Japan plant

- — AFP

TSMC will build a second foundry in Japan, the semiconduc­tor giant and its local partners announced Tuesday, weeks before its first in the country officially opens. Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Company — which counts Apple and Nvidia as clients — controls more than half the world’s output of silicon wafers, used in everything from smartphone­s to cars and missiles.

It has had to navigate geopolitic­al tussles between the United States and China in recent years as the two face off over technology import restrictio­ns, trade and Taiwan — its primary manufactur­ing base.

The second factory “is scheduled to begin operation by the end of the 2027”, TSMC said on Tuesday in a statement jointly issued with Sony Semiconduc­tor Solutions Corporatio­n, DENSO and Toyota.

“Together with JASM’s first fab, which is scheduled to begin operation in 2024, the overall investment in JASM will exceed $20 billion with strong support from the Japanese government,” the statement said. Joint venture JASM, or Japan Advanced Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing, is TSMC’s majority-owned manufactur­ing subsidiary in Kumamoto

next three years, as well as the “prompt payment of significan­t inflation bonuses”.

But the union has rejected the offer as “totally unacceptab­le”. The strike comes as Germany faces a growing wave of social unrest in the transport sector. Pilots with German airline Discover, a subsidiary

prefecture, where both factories will be based.

“In response to rising customer demand, JASM plans to commence constructi­on of its second fab by the end of 2024. The increased production scale is also expected to improve overall cost structure and supply chain efficiency for JASM,” the companies said.

Company chairman Mark Liu said last month the first foundry’s opening ceremony would be on Feb 24. Total production capacity at both plants is expected to reach more than 100,000 12-inch wafers per month. The sites will add more than 3,400 hightech profession­al jobs, they said.

TSMC said in a separate statement on Tuesday that its board of directors had approved a capital injection of up to $5.26 billion into JASM, without elaboratin­g. Japan’s government said last year it planned to spend $13 billion to boost domestic production of strategica­lly important semiconduc­tors and generative AI technology. Part of that spending would be to support the constructi­on of a second TSMC plant in Kumamoto, a Japanese trade ministry official said in November.

The company said its board also approved on Tuesday capital injection of up to $5 billion into its wholly-owned subsidiary TSMC Arizona, without elaboratin­g. Global worries about Taipei’s plummeting relations with Beijing, which claims the self-ruled island as its territory, have fuelled a US push to successful­ly woo TSMC into building the Arizona plant, one of the largest foreign investment­s in the country.

of Lufthansa, this week staged a 48-hour strike. Last week, airport security staff and public transport workers across Germany walked off the job. And two weeks ago, train drivers staged a five-day walkout, their longest ever and the fourth time they have gone on strike since November.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait