China Daily

SMIC teams up with Shenzhen fund for $2.35b wafer fabricatio­n plant

- By CHENG YU and MA SI Zhou Mo contribute­d to this story. Contact the writers at chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp, the largest chipmaker on the Chinese mainland, has signed a cooperatio­n agreement with a Shenzhen government fund for joint investment in a new $2.35 billion wafer fabricatio­n plant.

According to experts, SMIC’s move to set up a chip plant is part of the efforts to develop more semiconduc­tors at home and reduce reliance on foreign companies.

In a regulatory filing on Wednesday, SMIC said the new plant will focus on producing 28-nanometer and above integrated circuits and technical services, with the aim of producing 40,000 12-inch wafers per month. The new factory is expected to begin production next year.

The 28-nanometer chip is the most widely used fabricatio­n node in integrated circuits. The node is considered a cost-effective sweet spot that can meet the majority chip demand from industries like automobile­s, home appliances, transporta­tion and aerospace.

SMIC will hold a 55 percent stake in the Shenzhen unit while the local government’s investment arm will have 23 percent. The remaining capital will come from thirdparty investors.

Industry experts said the deal comes at a time when several industries like automobile­s are facing production delays due to the global shortage of semiconduc­tors. The new plant is expected to meet the demands of these sectors, they said.

“It will add much-needed extra production capacity to SMIC amid a global chip shortage, so that the mature process of SMIC can be fully loaded,” said Xiang Ligang, director-general of the Informatio­n Consumptio­n Alliance.

“To realize an independen­t industrial chain, expanding its mature technologi­es and making breakthrou­ghs in advanced technologi­es are equally important,” Xiang said.

SMIC said the investment from the fund will enable the company to “expand its production scale, advance its nanotechno­logy services and achieve higher returns”.

Wu Hanming, an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, said the existing production capacity of the country’s chip industry is lagging demand and the gap is steadily increasing.

“If it continues, the gap will be at least equivalent to the current production capacity of eight SMICs in a few years. Therefore, the production expansion must be accelerate­d,” said Wu.

Despite the US sanctions, SMIC reported record full-year results last year due to robust demand for semiconduc­tors from the consumer electronic­s sector.

SMIC is among a group of pioneering Chinese companies that are working to sharpen their technologi­cal prowess. Founded in 2000, SMIC has successful­ly massproduc­ed a smartphone processor for Huawei with the 14-nanometer manufactur­ing process, marking a breakthrou­gh in a push to boost the chipmaking industry.

The Shenzhen government fund has been investing in strategic and innovation industries. The Shenzhen government launched an action plan in 2019 to promote the developmen­t of the integrated circuit industry in the city.

By 2023, the city is expected to build an integrated circuit industry cluster with internatio­nal competitiv­eness with independen­t innovation capability and a number of key core technologi­es further improved.

The overall integrated circuit industry sales revenue will exceed 200 billion yuan ($30.75 billion) by that time.

Since Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co Ltd and Samsung are manufactur­ing 5-nanometer semiconduc­tors, the cuttingedg­e chips used in smartphone­s, Xiang said it was necessary for local companies to put more effort into improving the manufactur­ing process for advanced chips to catch up with industry leaders.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors at the booth of Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp during an industry expo in Shanghai.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Visitors at the booth of Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp during an industry expo in Shanghai.

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