Some 45%-54% of the world's semiconductor grade neon, critical
for the lasers used to make chips, comes from two Ukrainian
companies, Ingas and Cryoin, according to Reuters calculations
based on figures from the companies and market research firm
Techcet. Global neon consumption for chip production reached
about 540 metric tons last year, Techcet estimates.
Both firms have shuttered their operations, according to company
representatives contacted by Reuters, as Russian troops have
escalated their attacks on cities throughout Ukraine, killing
civilians and destroying key infrastructure.
The stoppage casts a cloud over the worldwide output of chips,
already in short supply after the coronavirus pandemic drove up
demand for cell phones, laptops and later cars, forcing some
firms to scale back production.
While estimates vary widely about the amount of neon stocks
chipmakers keep on hand, production could take a hit if the
conflict drags on, according to Angelo Zino, an analyst at CFRA.
"If stockpiles are depleted by April and chipmakers don't have
orders locked up in other regions of the world, it likely means
further constraints for the broader supply chain and inability
to manufacture the end-product for many key customers," he said.
Before the invasion, Ingas produced 15,000 to 20,000 cubic
meters of neon per month for customers in Taiwan, Korea, China,
the United States and Germany, with about 75% going to the chip
industry, Nikolay Avdzhy, the company's chief commercial
officer, said in an email to Reuters.
The company is based in Mariupol, which has been under siege by
Russian forces. On Wednesday, Russian forces destroyed a
maternity hospital there, in what Kyiv and Western allies called
a war crime. Moscow said the hospital was no longer functioning
and had been occupied by Ukrainian fighters.
"Civilians are suffering," Avdzhy said by email last Friday,
noting that the company's marketing officer could not respond
because he had no internet or phone access.
Cryoin, which produced roughly 10,000 to 15,000 cubic meters of
neon per month, and is located in Odessa, halted operations on
Feb. 24 when the attacks began to keep employees safe, according
to business development director Larissa Bondarenko.
Bondarenko said the company would be unable to fill orders for
13,000 cubic meter of neon in March unless the violence stopped.
She said the company could weather at least three months with
the plant closed, but warned that if equipment were damaged,
that would prove a bigger drag on company finances and make it
harder to restart operations quickly.
She also said she was unsure the company could access additional
raw materials for making neon.
Taiwan's Economy Ministry, in a statement to Reuters, said
Taiwanese firms had already made advanced preparations and had
"safety stocks" of neon, so it did not see any problems in the
supply chain in the near term.
Taiwan's central bank made similar comments earlier on Friday.
Ukrainian neon is a byproduct of Russian steel manufacturing.
The gas, which is also used in laser eye surgery, is produced in
China as well, but Chinese prices are rising steadily.
Bondarenko says prices, already under pressure after the
pandemic, had climbed by up to 500% from December. According to
a Chinese media report that cited Chinese commodity market
information provider biiinfo.com, the price of neon gas (99.9%
content) in China has quadrupled from 400 yuan/cubic meter in
October last year to more than 1,600 yuan/cubic meter in late
February.
Neon prices rose 600% in the run-up to Russia's 2014 annexation
of the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine, according to the U.S.
International Trade Commission.
Companies elsewhere could initiate neon production but it would
take nine months to two years to ramp up, according to Richard
Barnett, chief marketing officer of Supplyframe, which provides
market intelligence to companies across the global electronics
sectors.
But CFRA's Angelo Zino noted that companies may be unwilling to
invest in that process if the supply crunch is seen as
temporary.
(Reporting by Alexandra Alper; Additional Reporting by Brenda
Goh in Shanghai and Ben Blanchard in Taipei; Editing by Daniel
Wallis)
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