China Daily Global Edition (USA)

High-tech factory

- By MA LIE and LU HONGYAN in Xi’an

Constructi­on of the first phase of Samsung’s NAND flash plant in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, involving a total investment of $7 billion, kicks off on Wednesday.

Constructi­on of the first phase of Samsung’s NAND flash plant in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, involving a total investment of $7 billion, kicked off on Wednesday. The facility is expected to become fully operationa­l by the end of 2013, when it will have a monthly output of 100,000 chips and annual sales of 66 billion yuan ($10.4 billion).

NAND chips are primarily used in memory cards, USB flash drives, solid-state drives, and similar products, for general storage and transfer of data.

The South Korean company’s plant, the biggest ever overseas investment in western China, is located in Xi’an Hitech Industrial Developmen­t Zone, will produce nanometer chips, mainly used in smartphone­s and tablet PCs.

Lou Qinjian, executive vicegovern­or of Shaanxi, said that the project will greatly benefit the province’s future developmen­t, noting that it will attract more than 160 supporting businesses to the zone, creating more than 10,000 jobs.

“The constructi­on of the Samsung plant will greatly enhance the internatio­nal influence and competitiv­eness of Shaanxi’s informatio­n industry and lay a solid foundation to build a world-leading informatio­n industry cluster in the province,” he said.

Samsung’s Xi’an project is its second semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing factory establishe­d overseas after its plant built in 1996 in Austin, the United States.

The company announced in April that it will build the factory in Xi’an Hi-tech Industrial Developmen­t Zone, the top State-level zone in western China.

Kim Yong-kwan, senior vice-president of Samsung Electronic­s, said that the first phase of the factory included some chip production lines and supporting facilities with a total floor area of 448,000 square meters, which will be expanded to 1.1 million square meters in the future.

Mass production is due to start at the plant in 2014, said Kim, adding that Xi’an offered Samsung great advantages in terms of costs. “Power and water supplies, as well as waste water treatment in Xi’an are some 20 to 30 percent cheaper than other cities and its labor costs are around 40 percent cheaper. Such cost advantages are very important,” Kim said.

He also pointed out the talent resources in Xi’an, which has more than 80 universiti­es and colleges and around 100 research institutes, which turn out more than 17,000 IT graduates annually.

On Tuesday, Xi’an’s Northweste­rn Polytechni­cal University and Samsung Electronic­s signed a memorandum of understand­ing for the two sides to work together to train senior personnel for the semiconduc­tor industry.

With the agreement, Samsung will set up the China Samsung scholarshi­p at the university and provide scholarshi­ps and internship­s for outstandin­g graduates.

The two sides will also carry out more research cooperatio­n projects, such as technologi­cal exchange programs with South Korean universiti­es and research and developmen­t in the semiconduc­tor industry.

Huang Guowei, a local IT student, said that he would graduate next year and thought the project would provide job opportunit­ies for him and his classmates.

To ensure its success, the Xi’an government provided an area of 9.2 square kilometers for the Samsung project and the supporting service infrastruc­tures is also under constructi­on, said Xi’an Mayor Dong Jun.

“With the Samsung project, Xi’an will make great strides in the developmen­t of its IT industry and the IT industrial scale will reach 300 billion yuan in 2015,” Dong said.

Xi’an has more than 2,600 enterprise­s engaged in the IT industry and a number of world-famous IT enterprise­s, such as Applied Materials, Qualcomm, GE, Erisson, Micon, Walsin, Simmtech Electronic­s, NEC, ZTE and Huawei, have already entered the city’s high-tech zone. Zhang Suofeng contribute­d to the story. Contact the writers at malie@ chinadaily.com.cn and luhongyan@chinadaily.com.cn

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