Friday, November 23rd 2012
TSMC Looking to Build Fabs in the US
Global Foundries could soon howdy-neighbor TSMC in upstate New York, with the Taiwanese semiconductor giant looking to set up a fab there. According to an X-bit Labs report, TSMC began groundwork on its US venture by consulting with Deloitte, to look for viable sites in Rensselaer, Saratoga and Oneida counties, that have abundant water, power, and gas to operate 3.2 million square feet buildings with 1,000 employees, 40 percent of which are college-graduated engineers.
Deloitte also took a look around Luther Forest Technology Campus, where Global Foundries' Fab 8 is located. A little earlier this week, Bill Owens, a Congressman from upstate New York flew to Taiwan, to meet with TSMC CFO Lora Ho to pitch upstate a little more. TSMC is a principal foundry partner of companies such as Qualcomm, NVIDIA, and AMD.
Source:
X-bit Labs
Deloitte also took a look around Luther Forest Technology Campus, where Global Foundries' Fab 8 is located. A little earlier this week, Bill Owens, a Congressman from upstate New York flew to Taiwan, to meet with TSMC CFO Lora Ho to pitch upstate a little more. TSMC is a principal foundry partner of companies such as Qualcomm, NVIDIA, and AMD.
28 Comments on TSMC Looking to Build Fabs in the US
Has the USD gotten so bad that TSMC is now outsourcing to the USA?
Regardless, I'm not going to complain about high tech manufacturing jobs anywhere in the USA.
In industry like that it's not really important where is the factory, you will need good engineers in any of them.
They only manufacture in Taiwan, not China.
It's like calling American's Mexican or Canadian, which I'm sure wouldn't go down very well...
China isn't the only country where it isn't as economical as it used to be to out-source to various countries.
I don't believe labor, tax and legislation has gotten in the First World (US/EU) so easy for corps that it makes a difference, but times are a-changing... stone age is closer than we think.
BTW: America is one thing, and 'Merica and Da States another, lol. Time will proof the bad choice of a countries name. hehehehehe, just accept it.
Taiwanese don't mind being called Chinese, hell Singaporeans don't.
So from US, to Japan, to Taiwan, to China and now companies are coming...back to US? Don't get me wrong, I'd be glad to see a Made in USA label again. But for a time that label meant crap. Atari Jaguar was berated for that label. Made in USA was taboo. Quality was terrible and if you wanted quality you went to Japan. Made in USA didn't start standing for quality until suddenly the old US dinosaur businesses started folding. Jobs getting lost so oh no, we gotta support them! But still, its all hype. Have any of you even sat in a Ford from the last few years? Zomg, they are so flimsy, so much plastic it makes the cheapest of the cheap Japan/Korea car look good.
But now Lenovo brings a facility here, then TSMC is now too. Something is up. Companies don't just go investing heavy sums of money in projects like this if they don't expect to come out ahead. Goodwill to the nation and jobs is bs...there is no way they'd be taking a loss just on a PR stunt.
engineers in Austria are paid about 2500-5000€ in dollars $3200-$6400
I've taught at Delta, Benq, Unimicron, FSP, and now APD (Asian Power Devices) and at each place that's roughly what they make. They also get performance bonuses for Chinese New Year and some other holidays. From what I understand, the companies were still making money before they pulled out of the U.S. They just wanted to maximize profits so they went elsewhere.