TSMC planning advanced chip production in Arizona, says company's
founder
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[November 21, 2022]
By Sarah Wu
TAIPEI (Reuters) -Taiwanese chipmaker TSMC is planning to produce chips
with advanced 3-nanometre technology at its new factory in the U.S.
state of Arizona but the plans are not completely finalised yet, the
company's founder Morris Chang said on Monday.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC), a major Apple Inc
supplier and the world's largest contract chipmaker, is constructing a
$12 billion plant in Arizona.
Last year, Reuters reported TSMC's plans to build more chipmaking
factories in Arizona, including discussions about whether its next plant
should be more advanced which could make chips with 3-nanometer
technology compared to the slower, less-efficient 5-nanometer chips that
will be churned out when the facility begins production.
Chang, speaking to reporters in Taipei after returning from the APEC
summit in Thailand, said the 3-nanometre plant would be located at the
same Arizona site as the 5-nanometre plant.
"Three-nanometre, TSMC right now has a plan, but it has not been
completely finalised," said Chang, who has retired from TSMC but remains
influential in the company and the broader chip industry.
"It has almost been finalised - in the same Arizona site, phase two.
Five-nanometre is phase one, 3-nanometre is phase two."
TSMC, Asia's most valuable listed company, declined to comment, and
referred to its statement earlier this month that it while it was
building on a site for a potential second fab in Arizona it had not
arrived on a final decision.
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Taiwan's APEC representative and TSMC
founder Morris Chang speaks at a news conference after his return to
Taipei, Taiwan November 21, 2022. REUTERS/Ann Wang
The company is holding a "tool-in" ceremony in Arizona on Dec. 6.
Chang said he would be attending, along with TSMC customers and
suppliers and U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo.
Chang added that U.S. President Joe Biden has also been invited, but
that he didn't know if he would be going.
Taiwan's dominant position as a maker of chips used in technology
from cellphones and cars to fighter jets has caused concern the
world is too reliant on the island, especially as China ramps up
military pressure to assert its sovereignty claims.
Both the United States and Europe are putting up billions in
incentives to get companies to make chips closer to home, courting
in particular Taiwanese firms.
Chang said people had only just woken up to how important chips
were.
"There are a lot of jealous people, jealous of Taiwan's excellent
chip manufacturing," he said. "So there are also a lot of people who
for various reasons, whether it is for national security or making
money, hope to manufacture more chips in their countries."
Chang said in his meetings at APEC "many countries asked me, can we
go to their countries to manufacture chips?"
He did not say which countries those were.
(Reporting by Sarah Wu; Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Edmund
Klamann, Muralikumar Anantharaman, Gerry Doyle and Louise Heavens)
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