San Antonio Express-News

Texas in running for Samsung’s $17B chip site

- By Sohee Kim

Samsung Electronic­s Co. revealed additional details about its plans to build a cutting-edge semiconduc­tor facility in the U.S. in a filing with the state of Texas, making the disclosure as the Biden administra­tion vows to make the security of the U.S. chip supply a national priority. The South Korean company plans to invest about $17 billion in its Project Silicon Silver and create about 1,800 jobs over the first ten years, according to an economic impact study prepared by a local consultant. Some $5.1 billion would go into buildings and property improvemen­ts, while $9.9 billion would be spent on machinery and equipment.

The filing with the Texas comptrolle­r warned the chips project is “highly competitiv­e.” Samsung is evaluating alternate sites in Arizona and New York, as well as in Korea.

“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,” the study said.

In their first weeks in office, the Biden administra­tion has emphasized the importance of advanced technologi­es, including semiconduc­tors, artificial intelligen­ce and next-generation networks. The president has ordered a global supply chain review for microchips as well as large-capacity batteries, pharmaceut­icals and critical minerals and strategic materials such as rare earths.

Bloomberg News first reported in January that Samsung was considerin­g building an advanced chipmaking plant in the U.S., in hopes of winning more American clients and narrowing the gap with industry leader Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufac

turing Co. The company was in discussion­s to locate a facility in Austin capable of fabricatin­g chips as advanced as 3 nanometers, people familiar with the matter said at the time.

Details of Samsung’s discussion­s with local government­s have since leaked out in filings and other revelation­s. The economic impact study was prepared by Impact Datasource, an Austin-based economic consulting, research and analysis firm.

The report shows Samsung’s Project Silicon Silver would add approximat­ely 7 million square feet of new space to the Austin campus, where the company has had operations for decades. It estimates that 542 new workers would move to the city, contributi­ng to an addition of 1,626 new residents.

Property tax abatements would total about $1.5 billion over 20 years at the city and county levels, while direct and indirect economic output would be about $8.6 billion and salaries would total $7.3 billion.

A January filing detailed the likely timeline for the project. If Samsung chooses Austin, it would break ground in the second quarter of 2021 with the expectatio­n that production would be up and running by the fourth quarter of 2023, it said.

Separately, Samsung’s current foundry plant in Austin hasn’t resumed operations since Feb. 16 after it was ordered to halt operations by Austin Energy due to blackouts in the region. Power and water are back but it will take more time to fully restart operations, officials said.

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