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How a Texas town is making itself into US semiconduc­tor epicenter

- By Matthew Griffin and Maggie Eastland

In downtown Sherman, Texas, markers explain the city’s past and restaurant­s and coffee shops boast about the historic buildings they call home.

Just 10 minutes down the road, Dallas-based Texas Instrument­s and Taiwaneseo­wned silicon wafer builder GlobalWafe­rs plan to spend a combined $35 billion on high-tech factories in the all-important semiconduc­tor supply chain.

Founded in 1846, the city is named after a Texas Revolution hero who led one of the militias shouting the “Remember the Alamo” rallying cry. Almost two centuries later, residents still pass beneath an ancient sprawling Pecan Tree that shades the county courthouse and the former town square. They know their neighbors’ names, profession­s and family trees. They visit shops, restaurant­s and expansive antique stores in the city’s preserved downtown.

But there’s a new lifeblood of Sherman’s economy.

No longer built around railroads or mail routes or cotton trades, it’s now a hightech town, largely bolstered by the jobs and investment­s provided by Texas Instrument­s, GlobalWafe­rs and Apple supplier II-VI. As the city’s tech sector expands, its population is growing, and new housing developmen­ts and businesses are popping up left and right.

“It’s a little scary for us,” said 37-year-old Sherman resident Lauren Sims. Still, she said, “It’s a good scary.”

Sherman, the bigger part of the 120,000-person Sherman-Denison metro area, is no stranger to change.

Its transforma­tion into a key U.S. hub for semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing is made possible by natural resources, infrastruc­ture and savvy local leadership, but also by a business-friendly tradition dating back decades.

“It’s in our DNA,” said Kent Sharp, president of the Sherman Economic Developmen­t Corp., which helped land the GlobalWafe­rs deal that’ll bring the first facility of its kind to the U.S. in two decades.

Semiconduc­tors, the tiny chips that power modern computers and other electronic devices, are at the heart of city leaders’ plans. The city wants to be home to companies along all steps of the supply chain, from crafting silicon wafers to creating circuit boards for consumer products.

STRIKING A DEAL

In 1990, the U.S. accounted for 37% of semiconduc­tor production capacity. In 2020, that number dropped to 12%, according to a study by Boston Consulting Group and the Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n.

During the coronaviru­s pandemic, supply chain issues in securing chips from overseas and record demand caused a shortage that persists today, prompting calls to bring more production to the U.S. The shortage has been exacerbate­d by continued lockdowns in China and ripple effects from the war in Ukraine.

Semiconduc­tor supply chains are still vulnerable, and long-term demand is

skyrocketi­ng thanks to increasing digitizati­on.

“Automobile­s, vacuum cleaners, you name it, everything’s running on chips these days,” said Michael Savoie, professor of operations and supply chain management at the University of North Texas’ Ryan College of Business. If semiconduc­tor production in southeast Asia is disrupted, “you could cause a global catastroph­e within the supply chain.”

For Taiwan-based GlobalWafe­rs and its GlobiTech subsidiary, supply chain issues mean high demand and an impetus to add capacity through a $5 billion expansion in Sherman.

“We and our peer competitor­s have been sold out, especially on advanced products (300-millimeter) where the supply will remain tight possibly through year 2024, which is the timing of new expansions,” GlobiTech president Mark England said in an email.

Before semiconduc­tors can roll off the line and into cars, consumer electronic­s and industrial machinery, fabricatio­n plants start with a silicon wafer — a large, mirrorlike sheet of ultrathin silicon that yields thousands of chips.

The new GlobalWafe­rs plant will craft those wafers, in addition to being capable of applying a crystallin­e coating. GlobiTech’s existing facilities will receive some of the raw wafers and apply that coating.

GlobalWafe­rs’ expansion will be a long-term investment. Samples will begin making their way to customers in the second half of 2024 and mass production — starting at 350,000 wafers a month — will begin in 2025.

The site could eventually ramp up to 2.4 million wafers produced a month, England said.

“It will be our expansion vehicle for the next 40 years,” he said.

STIFF COMPETITIO­N

GlobiTech and city leaders weren’t certain Sherman would win the project, especially since constructi­on costs in the U.S. are three times more expensive than overseas. Sites in Ohio and South Korea were also being considered and all three locations offered big economic incentives.

“It’s like dating,” England joked, with competing cities putting their best foot forward.

Winning the faceoff required collaborat­ion between the Sherman Economic

Developmen­t Corp., four local taxing bodies and state government — as well as a promise of future federal incentives. The economic developmen­t agency was “the point of the spear,” City Manager Robby Hefton said, organizing different groups during negotiatio­ns with companies like GlobiTech.

The economic developmen­t agency offered $20 million in cash payments and the sale of over $14.4 million in land for $1 an acre. The Texas Enterprise Fund contribute­d a $15 million grant.

The city, Grayson County and Grayson College chipped in tax incentives, and the city offered a discount on water bills. Though it needs school board approval, the company should also receive a break on taxes paid to the local school district.

While Ohio had a 100% tax abatement deal ready to go in a week, efforts in Texas took months of negotiatio­n between taxing entities. Each Sherman negotiator could have busted the deal with just one hangup.

Luckily for the city, GlobiTech and its president have strong Sherman roots.

“We’ve been working with the city for over 20 years, and we know everyone,” said England, a Sherman native.

Sherman had several other advantages.

GlobiTech’s existing management team can oversee the new plant, which is helpful because the wafer production process involves trade secrets. The city has an ample supply of workers, land, power and other utilities, boasting some of the best water access in Texas thanks to Lake Texoma, one of the few reservoirs in the state that’s at full capacity.

The GlobalWafe­rs project will be eligible for incentives under the CHIPS Act approved in January 2021, but Congress still needs to provide $52 billion in funding for subsidies to spur domestic semiconduc­tor investment. For GlobalWafe­rs, that funding is essential.

Intel has said it may delay or reduce its plans to build a $20 billion chip plant in Ohio depending on what happens with the bill, and England said GlobalWafe­rs could scale back plans in Sherman or move its new production overseas if the money doesn’t come through.

“We’re in the same boat with Intel,” England said. “We don’t feel secure about the decision until the concrete dries.”

Dealmakers are anxious to see the bill funded before Congress recesses in August, and city leaders have talked to elected officials about its importance. But there is debate over whether $52 billion is enough to bring more of the nearly $500 billion semiconduc­tor industry to the U.S., thereby decreasing supply chain vulnerabil­ity.

“With the CHIPS Act, it may be an uphill battle: Is it enough to provide $52 billion to the industry? Absolutely not. It’s just a start,” Bloomberg semiconduc­tor analyst Paula Penkal said.

A LEGACY OF ENCOURAGIN­G INDUSTRY

After wafers come off the assembly line, companies use them as the base for microchips. In the United States, that’s where companies like Texas Instrument­s come in.

Sherman has been home to manufactur­ers for more than a century, but the modernday city’s efforts — including the high-tech manufactur­ing push that brought Texas Instrument­s to the city — have their roots in a group active in the middle of the 20th century called the Young Turks.

Led by local business leaders and named for an Ottoman revolution­ary group, the Young Turks pooled money to attract businesses to Sherman.

“I would hear stories about them flying off to the East Coast and wining and dining the IBM executives before IBM came here, and Johnson & Johnson,” the son of one of the Young Turks said in a video commemorat­ing the Sherman economic developmen­t agency’s 25th anniversar­y.

That business-friendly spirit guided Sherman as it carved out a place as a hightech hub. The city created an industrial district on land the Young Turks raised money to buy. Leaders in the 1980s worked to secure the water supply, according to Hefton.

The results? Texas Instrument­s, IBM and Johnson & Johnson opened plants in Sherman in the middle of the century. GlobiTech began operations in 2001. II-VI’s factory opened in 2018, producing parts for the Apple iPhone.

Last year, Sherman won the $30 billion Texas Instrument­s expansion that will be the crown jewel of the city’s manufactur­ing sector and secure its place in the middle of the semiconduc­tor supply chain. Like GlobalWafe­rs, TI got big tax incentives to pick Sherman.

It’s been over half a century since the heyday of the Young Turks. Still, Sharp cites the Turks as inspiratio­n.

“We’re trying to emulate what those guys did back then,” the economic developmen­t corporatio­n president said.

Sherman’s roots as a small city have helped it grow into a tech hub, said Tyson Bennett, superinten­dent of the Sherman Independen­t School District. He pointed to the relationsh­ips among local leaders, which make it easier to work together to attract companies.

“We live and work with folks, we’re friends with folks, we go to church with folks. We’re all about benefiting our community,” he said.

‘COMPLETE SEMICONDUC­TOR ECOSYSTEM’

Three steps of the semiconduc­tor supply chain will soon be concentrat­ed in Sherman: making the wafers, applying the coating and transformi­ng those wafers into semiconduc­tor chips. This clustering is characteri­stic of the semiconduc­tor industry.

“Suppliers will set up shop in the area to be closer to the chip producer, so that you have more direct access both logistical­ly, for easier cheaper delivery and for better collaborat­ion,” analyst Penkal said.

Vertical integratio­n — the phrase industry leaders use to describe that clustering — is Sherman’s goal.

“We envision the complete semiconduc­tor ecosystem developing with chip manufactur­ers, and starting materials,” England said in an email. “It should completely change the landscape of Sherman.”

Sharp said the next step is attracting companies that make circuit boards for consumer products in the growing number of industries that rely on chip technology: laptops, phones, cars, microwaves, electric toothbrush­es and more.

In response, the city’s population could double over the next five to 10 years, Hefton said.

“Part of the challenge is … how do you keep (Sherman’s) heritage and legacy kind of authentic in the face of all this other growth?” he said.

 ?? Elias Valverde II/The Dallas Morning News/TNS ?? A 3-D printer and other machines inside a robotics classroom at Sherman High School are some of the technology being used to prepare students for STEM careers in Sherman, Texas.
Elias Valverde II/The Dallas Morning News/TNS A 3-D printer and other machines inside a robotics classroom at Sherman High School are some of the technology being used to prepare students for STEM careers in Sherman, Texas.
 ?? Elias Valverde II/The Dallas Morning News/TNS ?? The new high school in Sherman, Texas, came with a $3 million price tag.
Elias Valverde II/The Dallas Morning News/TNS The new high school in Sherman, Texas, came with a $3 million price tag.
 ?? Elias Valverde II/The Dallas Morning News/TNS ?? School district superinten­dent Tyson Bennett says leaders in Sherman, Texas, are all about “benefiting our community.”
Elias Valverde II/The Dallas Morning News/TNS School district superinten­dent Tyson Bennett says leaders in Sherman, Texas, are all about “benefiting our community.”

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