Houston Chronicle

Samsung seeks $1B in incentives for Austin site

- By Kara Carlson and Bob Sechler

Samsung is seeking a taxpayersu­bsidized incentives package worth more than $1 billion to choose Austin for its next big facility — a 7 million square-foot, next-generation chip fabricatio­n plant that would be valued at more than $17 billion and create 1,800 jobs, documents filed with the state show.

Documents made public by the Texas comptrolle­r’s office Thursday show that Samsung is seeking tax abatements from Travis County, the city of Austin and the Manor Independen­t School District. Samsung is also seeking an incentive deal from the state’s Texas Enterprise Fund, the documents show.

The documents indicate Samsung is seeking a 100 percent tax abatement over 20 years from Travis County, which would be worth $718.3 million, the documents show. Travis County spokesman Hector Nieto said the county has not received a formal applicatio­n from Samsung. He declined to comment further.

The tech giant is also seeking tax abatements from the city of Austin that would be worth $87.2 million over five years, the documents show.

In addition, Samsung is seeking a

Chapter 313 incentive agreement with the Manor ISD. That refers to Chapter 313 of the Texas Tax Code, which allows school districts to grant property tax breaks for economic developmen­t projects. The state is then required to repay the school district for the amount of property tax it gives up in the agreement. The proposed agreement calls for saving Samsung $252.9 million in taxes to the school district.

The proposed new facility projects an initial average annual wage of $66,254 for its employees. The facility could have a local economic impact of $8.6 billion over its first 20 years of operation, the documents show.

Austin is already home to Samsung’s largest operation outside its South Korean headquarte­rs. Landing the new facility would add to a recent string of stunning economic developmen­t wins for Austin, which in the past six months has seen Tesla start work on a $1 billion assembly facility locally and tech giant Oracle formally move its corporate headquarte­rs to Central Texas.

If Samsung chooses Austin, work would start on the new facility as early as the second quarter of this year, with a planned completion date by the end of 2023, the documents show.

Samsung is also considerin­g incentives offers from New York, Arizona

and another site in Texas, the documents state.

“This project is highly competitiv­e, and the company is looking at alternativ­e sites in the U.S. including Arizona and New York, as well as abroad in Korea, where Samsung Austin Semiconduc­tor’s parent company is headquarte­red. … Because of its strong ties to the local community and the successful past 25 years of manufactur­ing in Texas, Samsung Austin Semiconduc­tor would like to continue to invest in the city and the state,” Samsung said in its applicatio­n.

“Due to the higher tax cost of operating in Texas, the appraised value limitation is a determinin­g factor. Without the appraised value limitation award, the company would likely locate the project in Arizona, New York or Korea,” the company said.

Samsung is one of the world’s largest memory chip and smartphone makers. The company is planning to build an advanced logic chipmaking plant in the United States. The plant is expected to be a significan­t step forward for Samsung’s overall chipmaking capabiliti­es. The facility would improve Samsung’s ability to compete with other chipmakers and could help it become the chipmaker of choice for companies including Apple and Advanced Micro Devices.

Samsung has said no decision has been made. However, the chipmaker has already taken some steps in recent months that could indicate it is preparing for an Austin expansion.

In October, the company bought seven tracts of land totaling 257.5 acres near its existing facility in northeaste­rn Austin. In December, the company also requested a zoning change to allow for more industrial uses on three tracts.

The Austin City Council recently approved a plan to relocate most of the existing Samsung Boulevard, which runs alongside Samsung’s current Austin facility. Documents filed with the city called for removing a section of Samsung Boulevard from East Parmer Lane just before it runs into the Pioneer Crossing subdivisio­n. In its place, a new spur of Braker Lane would be built to route traffic from the subdivisio­n onto the new Samsung Boulevard.

Samsung has had operations in Austin since 1997. It has a fabricatio­n plant there in which it has previously said about 10,000 people work, of which about 3,000 are Samsung employees and the rest are contractor­s. Samsung also has a research and developmen­t facility project in Austin. The company has said it has invested about $17 billion in its Austin campus through the years.

 ?? Ralph Barrera / Associated Press file photo ?? Women walk against the Austin skyline. Landing the new Samsung facility would add to a recent string of economic developmen­t wins for Central Texas, including a $1 billion Tesla assembly facility and tech giant Oracle’s corporate headquarte­rs.
Ralph Barrera / Associated Press file photo Women walk against the Austin skyline. Landing the new Samsung facility would add to a recent string of economic developmen­t wins for Central Texas, including a $1 billion Tesla assembly facility and tech giant Oracle’s corporate headquarte­rs.

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