Thursday, May 4th 2023

GlobalFoundries Announces New General Manager to Lead Malta, NY Manufacturing Site

GlobalFoundries (GF) today announced the appointment of Hui Peng Koh as vice president and general manager of the company's semiconductor manufacturing facility in Malta, New York. Building on her experience in leading the 1,200 strong engineering team in Malta for the last three years, Ms. Koh is stepping up to lead GF's most advanced U.S. fab that supports a wide range of customers. She succeeds long time GF executive and industry veteran Peter Benyon who will retire in early July 2023 after more than 40 years in the semiconductor industry including being part of the GF team since the acquisition of Chartered Semiconductor in 2011.

Ms. Koh, an accomplished leader with more than 23 years of semiconductor manufacturing experience, currently serves as vice president of manufacturing engineering at GF. Prior to her current role, she was the director of lithography and held various leadership positions at the company's Malta facility. Previously, she served in several technology development roles at GF's Singapore campus. Ms. Koh earned her master's degree in materials engineering from Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.
Ms. Koh is also the executive sponsor of the GF Malta GlobalWomen chapter, an employee resource group comprised of a worldwide network of women and allies whose mission is to create a sustainable framework for the professional development of women at GF. Throughout her career, she has placed a strong emphasis on operational excellence, talent development, inclusion, and mentoring for GF team members as they grow their careers.

"GF and our NY Fab are leading the industry in delivering the feature-rich semiconductors needed to meet the world's demand for these essential chips. I am so pleased to continue with our tradition of growing GF fab leaders from within our organization, whose leadership, expertise and commitment are the bedrock of our business," said Dr. Thomas Caulfield, president and CEO of GF. "In her new role as the leader of our more than 2,000 strong manufacturing team in New York, Hui Peng will help ensure that we have the right capabilities and team in place to continue to drive operational excellence and exceed our customers' expectations while executing on our growth strategy."

Peter Benyon, GF's senior vice president and general manager, will retire in early July after leading the Malta facility since July 2019. Prior to that he ran GF's world-scale 300 mm fab in Singapore.

"On behalf of our entire global team, I want to thank and recognize Peter's countless contributions to GF, which were pivotal in accelerating our growth and value creation, and have set the foundation for our future," Caulfield added.
Source: GlobalFoundries
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10 Comments on GlobalFoundries Announces New General Manager to Lead Malta, NY Manufacturing Site

#1
bug
You put just Malta in your headline, most of the world will start thinking: is that barren island going to become the Taiwan of Europe now?
Posted on Reply
#2
the54thvoid
Super Intoxicated Moderator
That's what I thought. lol.

Just checked, a town with a population of just 20k needs a bit more geographical context in the headline (contrast to Malta, the nation, with half-a-million pop).
Posted on Reply
#3
bug
the54thvoidThat's what I thought. lol.

Just checked, a town with a population of just 20k needs a bit more geographical context in the headline (contrast to Malta, the nation, with half-a-million pop).
And a history ;)
Posted on Reply
#4
TheLostSwede
News Editor
bugYou put just Malta in your headline, most of the world will start thinking: is that barren island going to become the Taiwan of Europe now?
It was the press release headline, better now?
Blame the US for being US centric.
Posted on Reply
#5
bug
TheLostSwedeIt was the press release headline, better now?
Send them my best :P
TheLostSwedeBlame the US for being US centric.
Yeah, it's pretty funny how many settlements have been named after the Old Continent and now you get Athens GA, Manchester NH and now Malta NY :D
Posted on Reply
#6
TheLostSwede
News Editor
bugYeah, it's pretty funny how many settlements have been named after the Old Continent and now you get Athens GA, Manchester NH and now Malta NY :D
Have you been to Cabool, MO?
Or maybe Angola, NY?
Or one of the five Vienna, Dublin or Cantons?
Apparently there's no less than eight different Paris and nine Berlin USA...
Amsterdam seems to have been the most popular name, with no less than 12 alternative locations...
Maine apparently fitted in all of Sweden :rolleyes:


The list goes on and someone clearly decided to compile it for us.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._places_named_after_non-U.S._places
Posted on Reply
#7
bug
TheLostSwedeHave you been to Cabool, MO?
Or maybe Angola, NY?
Or one of the five Vienna, Dublin or Cantons?
Apparently there's no less than eight different Paris and nine Berlin USA...
Amsterdam seems to have been the most popular name, with no less than 12 alternative locations...
Maine apparently fitted in all of Sweden :rolleyes:


The list goes on and someone clearly decided to compile it for us.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._places_named_after_non-U.S._places
Good one :roll:
Posted on Reply
#8
Eternit
TheLostSwedeHave you been to Cabool, MO?
Or maybe Angola, NY?
Or one of the five Vienna, Dublin or Cantons?
Apparently there's no less than eight different Paris and nine Berlin USA...
Amsterdam seems to have been the most popular name, with no less than 12 alternative locations...
Maine apparently fitted in all of Sweden :rolleyes:


The list goes on and someone clearly decided to compile it for us.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._places_named_after_non-U.S._places
In Canada there is London, Ontario with population about half a million.
Also some of large US cities are named after not so large cities in UK e.g. Boston or even New York is named after York at least they named it New.
Posted on Reply
#9
Bomby569
The Asians (people, not talking about companies, to be clear) are dominating tech.
Posted on Reply
#10
bug
Bomby569The Asians (people, not talking about companies, to be clear) are dominating tech.
And, like all blanket statements, this one is also false. Rare talent is just that: rare. It's everywhere, from Europe, to Asia, America, Australia and Africa. The only difference is some countries make it easier for talented people to shine, while (many) others do the opposite.

And I'm not just talking theory, I have had the good luck to work with talented people from literally all over the world. Not C-level executives, but competent engineers or managers.
Posted on Reply
Nov 21st, 2024 11:33 EST change timezone

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