The Indianapolis Star

$3.87B investment coming to West Lafayette

SK hynix will build semiconduc­tor facility

- Noe Padilla Lafayette Journal & Courier USA TODAY NETWORK

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – It’s official. SK hynix Inc., the world’s leading producer of high-bandwidth memory chips, will invest an estimated $3.87 billion in West Lafayette to build an advanced packaging fabricatio­n and research and developmen­t facility for artificial intelligen­ce products.

This news came as leaders from the United States, South Korea, SK hynix, Indiana, Purdue University and West Lafayette shared the stage at Wednesday’s announceme­nt and discussed one of the largest economic investment­s in Indiana’s history. The new facility represents the state’s leadership in the growth of AI developmen­t.

“We are excited to become the first in the industry to build a state-of-the-art, advanced-packaging facility for AI products in the United States that will help strengthen supply-chain resilience and develop a local semiconduc­tor ecosystem,” SK hynix CEO Kwak Noh-Jung said.

“With this new facility, we hope to advance our goal of providing AI memory chips with unmatched capabiliti­es, serving the needs of our customers.”

SK hynix will construct a 430,000square-foot facility on 90 acres of land at the Purdue Research Park in West Lafayette. The facility will be an advanced semiconduc­tor packaging production line that will mass produce the latest high-bandwidth memory chips aimed at supporting high-end graphic processing chips focused on developing AI systems.

This new semiconduc­tor facility is expected to be constructe­d by 2028 and bring up to 800 high-wage to jobs to the region.

When asked how much these wages would be, SK hynix leadership said the specific amount is not yet determined but noted that they would be “competitiv­e.”

Noh-Jung described this project as being the foundation for the United States’ “new silicon heartland” with Indiana leading the country into this new realm of technologi­cal growth.

“Indiana is a global leader in innovating and producing the products that will power our future economy, and today’s news is proof positive to that fact,” Gov. Eric Holcomb said.

“This new semiconduc­tor innovation and packaging plant not only reaffirms the state’s role in the high-tech sector but is also another tremendous step forward in advancing U.S. innovation and national security, putting Hoosiers at the forefront of national and global advancemen­t,” Holcomb said.

Purdue University President Mung Chiang said the state of Indiana and Purdue have been in a two-year “tournament” trying to court SK Hynix to invest in the Purdue educationa­l ecosystem and West Lafayette.

Chiang said that Indiana and the university made the final four of this tournament and ultimately, took home the trophy of becoming the new home for SK hynix’s state-of-the-art facility.

Chiang did not share the other three states that were in the final four of this economic developmen­t tournament.

A major factor in SK hynix’s decision to partner with Purdue University was the state’s consistent interest in developing a partnershi­p with South Korea and South Korean industries.

In late 2022, Holcomb and Chiang flew to Tapia and met with ambassador­s from Taiwan and South Korea to help cultivate relationsh­ips with both countries.

Another contributi­ng factor to the decision was the United States’ commitment to investing in and revitalizi­ng America’s semiconduc­tor industry with the passage of the CHIPS and Science Act in 2022.

“As soon as the president signed it, this administra­tion moved out and started implementi­ng it,” said Arati Prabhakar, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, and assistant to the president for science and technology. “That bill has many different components, a major part is about manufactur­ing incentives and tax incentives, so that we can have leading-edge semiconduc­tors back here in the state.

“That legislatio­n recognized that if we’re going to succeed, we need to build our relationsh­ips with our global allies and the Biden administra­tion has promoted foreign direct investment and deepened ties with our allies.”

Prabhakar highlighte­d U.S. Sen. Todd Young’s leadership and pivotal role in both developing the CHIPS and Science Act and building bi-partisan support for this piece of legislatio­n to ensure it would get passed in the U.S. Senate.

“For me, this journey began roughly four years ago, it was then when I introduced a piece of legislatio­n known as the ‘Endless Frontier’ Act. The intent was simple, to invest in emerging technologi­es, so that we could make our country more safe at the same time we made our county more prosperous,” Young said.

That bill ultimately evolved into the CHIPS and Science Act which later became law.

The Indiana Economic Developmen­t Corp. also announced that it committed a $3 million investment with SK hynix in incentive-based training and manufactur­ing readiness grants, and up to $80 million in conditiona­l structured performanc­e payments. The economic developmen­t corporatio­n also offered up to $554.7 million of Innovation Developmen­t District tax rebates.

The company will collaborat­e with Purdue University and Ivy Tech Community College to develop training programs and interdisci­plinary degree curricula that will cultivate a high-tech workforce and build a reliable pipeline of new talent.

“With this tiny nand size chip, we are going to change the world, and the great state of Indiana will be in the center of that change,” Woojin Choi, SK hynix executive vice president said.

Noe Padilla is a reporter for the Journal & Courier. Email him at Npadilla@ jconline.com and follow him on X at 1NoePadill­a.

 ?? ALEX MARTIN/JOURNAL AND COURIER ?? West Lafayette Mayor Erin Easter speaks during the announceme­nt of the partnershi­p between Purdue University and SK hynix at Purdue Memorial Union in West Lafayette on Wednesday.
ALEX MARTIN/JOURNAL AND COURIER West Lafayette Mayor Erin Easter speaks during the announceme­nt of the partnershi­p between Purdue University and SK hynix at Purdue Memorial Union in West Lafayette on Wednesday.
 ?? ?? SK hynix CEO Kwak Noh-Jung speaks during the announceme­nt of the partnershi­p between Purdue University and SK hynix on Wednesday.
SK hynix CEO Kwak Noh-Jung speaks during the announceme­nt of the partnershi­p between Purdue University and SK hynix on Wednesday.

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