Albuquerque Journal

Tech advancemen­ts

Innovation helps Intel add 82 workers in Rio Rancho in 2020

- Copyright © 2021 Albuquerqu­e Journal BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

I ntel Corp.’s Rio Rancho campus is bustling with activity thanks to the chipmakers’ local focus on building new, innovative technologi­es that support the company’s evolving global operations.

The company hired another 82 people at its New Mexico plant in 2020, growing its local workforce beyond 1,800 employees, according to the company’s annual report to Sandoval County, released Monday morning. That caps a threeyear turnaround at the Rio Rancho campus, where the workforce has expanded by 64% after bottoming out at about 1,100 people in 2017.

The local site had been steadily shedding jobs since 2013, when it employed about 3,300 people, as major investment­s in new chip-making technology went to other U.S. sites and Intel plants overseas.

In Arizona, for example, Intel opened a $7 billion manufactur­ing facility last year. And in March, it announced another $20 billion investment there to build two more factories.

But in 2018, the New Mexico facility began hiring again, after Intel employees here developed new technologi­es to help speed data processing power for a range of industry applicatio­ns.

The local breakthrou­ghs started with “silicon photonics,” whereby Rio Rancho innovators developed new methods to fuse optics technology, or lasers, with traditiona­l silicon-based electronic servers. That next-generation technology uses light to speed data transfer, compared with traditiona­l digital communicat­ions that rely on electronic­s to transfer and process informatio­n.

That gave Rio Rancho a new company niche in silicon-photonics components, which are now used in Intel transceive­rs and receivers for data centers.

Next, Intel transferre­d developmen­t of a new memory technology to Rio Rancho, allowing the plant to hire more people. That technology, called 3D XPoint, is based on a new type of engineerin­g architectu­re that places data memory

and storage much closer to microproce­ssors inside computers or data centers, allowing informatio­n to transfer back and forth at much faster speeds.

Finally, Rio Rancho has become the key corporate site for another new technology — the Embedded Multi-Die Interconne­ct Bridge, or EMIB. That’s basically a new chip that sits on top of processing, or memory chips, to connect and transfer data between them, said Rio Rancho site Public Affairs Director Erika Edgerly.

Those new technologi­es give Rio Rancho a unique role in Intel efforts to simplify and optimize semiconduc­tor packaging, memory and connectivi­ty.

“It makes our site critically important to Intel’s road map forward,” Edgerly told the Journal.

Intel made $290 million in capital investment­s last year in its Rio Rancho plant, which has an estimated $1.2 billion annual economic impact in New Mexico. It spent $200 million on products and services from local companies in 2020, and paid $598,000 in property taxes to Sandoval County. And it’s still hiring. “We have over 30 more jobs now posted for the New Mexico site,” said Intel spokespers­on Linda Qian.

 ?? JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL ?? A three-year turnaround in employment at Intel’s Rio Rancho campus saw the workforce increase by 64% since 2017.
JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL A three-year turnaround in employment at Intel’s Rio Rancho campus saw the workforce increase by 64% since 2017.

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