TSMC is the world's most advanced chip-maker, and its investment
plans are being closely watched amid a global chip shortage and
new initiatives in the U.S. and Europe to subsidize
semiconductor production. TSMC announced last year that it would
invest $10 billion to $12 billion to build a chip factory in
Phoenix.
Reuters this month reported that previously disclosed factory
could be the first of up to up to six planned plants at the
site. Now, company officials are debating whether the next plant
should be a more advanced facility that can make chips with
so-called 3-nanometer chipmaking technology compared to the
slower, less-efficient 5-nanometer technology used for the first
factory.
The more advanced 3-nanometer plant could cost $23 billion to
$25 billion, one person familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Details of TSMC's plans for the additional factories at the
Arizona site have not been previously reported.
Officials have also sketched out plans for TSMC to make
next-generation 2-nanometer and smaller chips as the Phoenix
campus is built out the next 10 to 15 years, the person said.
In building the plants, TSMC is likely to compete against Intel
Corp and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd for subsides from the U.S.
government. President Joe Biden has called for $50 billion in
funding to support domestic chip manufacturing, and the U.S.
Senate could take action on that as early as this week.
Some government officials worry that subsidies for TSMC could
help Taiwan, where the company would likely continue to conduct
research and development, more than the U.S. But the U.S.
subsidy plan does not exclude foreign firms.
Government and industry officials say a strong domestic
chip-making sector is critical for the economy and national
security. Although U.S. chip firms such as Qualcomm Inc and
Nvidia Corp dominate their markets globally, most of their chips
are manufactured in Asia.
Intel has also committed to two more new fabrication plants, or
fabs, in Arizona, while Samsung is planning a $17 billion
factory adjacent to an existing facility in Austin, Texas.
A debate over how to boost chip-making is also playing out in
the European Union. Intel has shown serious interest in those
efforts, with chief executive Pat Gelsinger pitching a subsidy
that could amount to $9 billion for a proposed "Eurofab" during
a trip to Brussels last month.
EU industry commissioner Thierry Breton, who has championed the
Eurofab idea, also spoke with TSMC's Europe president, Maria
Marced, last month. Although Breton publicly called the TSMC
talk a "good exchange," a second person familiar with the matter
said the TSMC talks in Europe have gone "very poorly."
A TSMC spokeswoman said that the company has not ruled out any
possibilities, but that there are no plans for a plant in
Europe.
European chip and auto companies, for their part, are mostly
lined up against the idea. They would prefer subsidies for the
older-generation chips that are heavily used by car
manufacturers and are in short supply.
Many of TSMC's most lucrative customers, such as Apple, are
U.S.-based, while its European customer base is made up of
mostly of automakers buying less-advanced chips. In the first
quarter, clients based in Europe and the Middle East only
accounted for 6% of TSMC's revenue, far outpaced by the by 67%
of sales from North America and 17% from Asia Pacific.
Sources said TSMC has not ruled out building an older-generation
chip plant in Europe to serve auto customers.
POACHING FROM INTEL
TSMC this year hired Benjamin Miller, a 25-year Intel veteran,
as its head of human resources in Arizona. The company says that
it has hired 250 engineers there and that about 100 of them,
along with their families, have been sent to Tainan, Taiwan,
where they will complete a 12- to 18-month training program
before returning to Arizona.
TSMC declined to comment on specific details of its Arizona
plans, but its Chief Executive CC Wei last month said that
"further expansion is possible" after an initial phase. He said
the company would gauge efficiency at the site and customer
demand and decide on the next steps.
TSMC chairman and founder Morris Chang, warned last month of
higher operating costs and a thin talent pool for the U.S. plans
in a rare public speech attended by Wei and chairman Mark Liu.
"In the United States, the level of professional dedication is
no match to that in Taiwan, at least for engineers," Chang said.
He warned that "short-term subsidy can't make up for long-term
operational disadvantage."
TSMC's first Arizona factory will be relatively small, with a
projected output of 20,000 wafers - 12-inch silicon discs that
can each contain thousands of chips - per month. By contrast,
TSMC's "gigafabs" in Taiwan can produce 100,000 wafers per
month.
But TSMC leaders are taking a long view, starting with mature
technology and ramping up volume while gradually introducing the
most advanced processes, a third person familiar with the matter
said. Like the others, the person declined to be identified
because of the sensitivity of the matter.
“You just don’t go into Phoenix, 10,000 miles away, and start
fabricating on the leading edge,” the person said.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco, Ben Blanchard and
Yimou Lee in Taipei, Douglas Busvine in Frankfurt and Karen
Freifeld in New York. Editing by Jonathan Weber and Gerry Doyle)
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