Santa Fe New Mexican

Samsung plans to build chip plant

- By David McCabe

Samsung will build a $17 billion semiconduc­tor factory in Taylor, Texas, it said last week, giving a big boost to a bipartisan effort in Washington to persuade chipmakers to build more of the components in the United States.

The company’s decision Tuesday came after months of deliberati­on over possible locations in the United States and South Korea. The company, one of the world’s largest makers of computer chips, considered a site in Austin, which is about 40 minutes from Taylor, as well as locations in Arizona and New York.

As Washington has urged chipmakers to build more in the United States, cities have raced to get a piece of the potential boom. Taylor went to great lengths to lure the Samsung plant. The city, its independen­t school district and the surroundin­g county promised the company hundreds of millions of dollars in tax breaks.

Semiconduc­tor plants require abundant water and reliable power, so they reached a deal to transport water from the adjacent county for the facility.

Samsung’s decision comes during a major shortage of semiconduc­tors, which are critical to products as diverse as Ford F-150s, medical devices and iPhones.

Lawmakers and the Biden administra­tion have grown concerned that not enough of the vital components are made in America. China has invested heavily in incentiviz­ing production of computer chips inside its borders, and Taiwan and South Korea both produce a major share of the semiconduc­tors. Policymake­rs worry that leaves the United States at an economic and national security disadvanta­ge.

The plant in Taylor will be the latest to be built in America in recent years. Intel broke ground this year on two new factories on an existing campus in Arizona.

 ?? ALAN DIAZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Shoppers walk by a Samsung store in Miami.
ALAN DIAZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Shoppers walk by a Samsung store in Miami.

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