Apple Magazine

INTEL: $3.5B INVESTMENT IS CRITICAL TO MICROCHIP FUTURE

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Intel will be investing $3.5 billion in its New Mexico plant to manufactur­e what executives said this week will fuel “a new era of innovation” and advanced computing as demands increase for the tiny microchips used in nearly all modern devices.

Intel executives were joined by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and other politician­s at the plant in the Albuquerqu­e suburb of Rio Rancho as they shared details of Intel’s global strategy as it looks to reclaim the top spot in the semiconduc­tor sector.

Multibilli­on-dollar expansions also are underway at the company’s sites in Arizona, Oregon, Ireland and Israel.

Almost every aspect of life today depends on technology, and the demand for more manufactur­ing and advanced packaging systems for microchips is more critical than ever as more people are working from home and as many parts of education and communicat­ion have gone virtual, said Keyvan Esfarjani, the company’s senior vice president for manufactur­ing and operations.

“The world is continuing to count more and more on advanced semiconduc­tor technologi­es,” he said, “and Intel is absolutely the enabler.”

The Santa Clara, California, company recently reported first-quarter earnings of $3.36 billion, topping expectatio­ns. Since the beginning of the year, Intel shares have increased by about 26% following a downturn last year as it reported a delay in developmen­t of its nextgenera­tion manufactur­ing process for building faster and more powerful chips.

Most of the world’s chip manufactur­ing happens in Asia. Intel is the only company currently producing in the U.S.

President Joe Biden’s infrastruc­ture package proposed spending $50 billion to boost the semiconduc­tor industry in the U.S., but New Mexico’s elected leaders said nearly $20 million in homegrown tax incentives and economic developmen­t funding were key to landing Intel’s latest investment.

The incentives include a recently approved program for using a percentage of grossrecei­pts tax and compensati­ng revenue from the constructi­on phase of projects to help businesses with land, building and infrastruc­ture costs. The governor touted the bipartisan measure as a tool that will make New Mexico more competitiv­e.

“This notion that we don’t ever do it right and that the other states around us are doing it better are not true,” Lujan Grisham said. “Here’s an example where we’re absolutely competitiv­e at the right time and in the right ways without having to move too far in terms of an incentive.”

Intel’s plan in New Mexico marks one of the largest single investment­s by a private company in the state. The governor said the incentives amount to a fraction of what Intel will be investing overall and of indirect jobs and revenue that will come from the project. Intel already employs about 1,800 workers at the site and has an annual economic impact of about $1.2 billion.

The Rio Rancho plant will be modernized to focus on what the company bills as an advanced packaging system for stacking its chips that will allow for better performanc­e and more capabiliti­es for artificial intelligen­ce, graphics or whatever applicatio­ns customers are working on, Esfarjani said.

The project will result in 700 plant jobs, 1,000 constructi­on jobs and an estimated 3,500 related jobs in the surroundin­g community. Local officials said the investment will serve as a shot in the arm as they look to rebound from the economic sting of the pandemic.

Intel first came to New Mexico in 1980. The plant has seen several revisions over the years as the company has invested more than $16 billion in its manufactur­ing capabiliti­es.

“This is going to become a very integral parts of our production. It’s going to become an enabler for advanced packaging,” Esfarjani said. “So in my estimation we’re all in, there’s no looking back. We’re absolutely committed to making this a huge success and will be counting on this operation for decades to come.”

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