Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Intel to expand Irish production to meet global chip demand

CEO tells key customers Leixlip plant will share in $1bn capex boost in 2018

- Fearghal O’Connor Deputy Business Editor

US semiconduc­tor giant Intel is to expand production capacity at its Leixlip campus to meet growing demand for its computer chips.

In a letter seen by the Sunday Independen­t, Intel interim chief executive Bob Swan outlined to major global customers an extra $1bn of capital expenditur­e that it plans to spend in 2018, citing the Leixlip facility as a key beneficiar­y. Swan said the first half of 2018 had shown “remarkable growth” and the PC market had grown for the first time since 2011. Strong demand for gaming and commercial systems had “put pressure on our factory network” and “supply is undoubtedl­y tight”.

“To address this challenge”, Swan wrote that Intel was investing “a record $15bn in capital expenditur­e in 2018, up approximat­ely $1bn from the beginning of the year.

“We’re putting that $1bn into our 14-nm [nanometre] manufactur­ing sites in Oregon and Arizona, Ireland and Israel,” he added.

The confirmati­on comes amid intense industry speculatio­n that Intel is about to approve a massive new extension at its Irish plant that could create 4,000 jobs.

Well-informed sources claimed that preparatio­ns were underway for even bigger investment. A 90,000 square metre expansion of the high-tech Fab 24 facility at Leixlip, which received planning permission in 2017 but is yet to be publicly approved by Intel’s US-based global management team, could create 3,000 constructi­on jobs and a further 850 manufactur­ing jobs.

There is growing expectatio­n that Intel will soon award a contract for site clearance and preparatio­n at the Kildare complex and that major Irish constructi­on firms have visited the plant for discussion­s.

That work — which could be worth as much as €50m to the constructi­on sector — would clear the way for investment of up to €2bn in new semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing facilities, said sources.

An Intel spokesman said that the company would expand its 14 nanometre semiconduc­tor chip production capacity at the Leixlip campus and said “the production capacity is being expanded within our existing building space”.

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