Merck KGaA of Darmstadt, Germany - which uses the name EMD
Electronics for its North American electronics business to avoid
confusion with the unaffiliated pharmaceutical company of the
same name - supplies a range of chemicals used by chip
factories, which are expected to expand if U.S. lawmakers pass a
$52 billion aide package to bolster domestic manufacturing.
The company plans to spend $1 billion through 2025 for sites in
Arizona, California, Texas and Pennsylvania.
"The chip shortage needs industry-wide cooperation to resolve
the supply chain issues consumers are currently facing," Kai
Beckmann, chief executive of the German firm's electronics unit,
said in a statement.
Merck KGaA also said Tuesday it is forming a joint venture with
analytics firm Palantir. The joint venture will aim to pull in
data from material and chemical suppliers on one side and chip
factories from the other and analyze it to improve efficiency.
Both the suppliers and the chip factories have extensive trade
secrets and have historically been reluctant to share data
beyond their own organizations, said Laura Matz, who will
oversee the new joint venture, which will be called Athinia.
Athinia will be housed within another Merck KGaA subsidiary
called EMD Digital that is separate from its electronics
business.
"That has been the hurdle of solving this problem (of
supply-chain inefficiency) for years," Matz said of the
hesitance to share data. "Until we came up with the concept of
how we're structuring the data in a way that there's no
(intellectual property) contamination, we couldn't get over it."
Merck KGaA did not disclose financial details of the joint
venture with Palantir.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by
Christopher Cushing)
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