Tuesday, December 26th 2023
Intel's Largest Ever Chip Fab Investment will be a $25 Billion Facility in Israel
Intel has secured a $3.2 billion grant from the Israeli government for constructing a new $25 billion chip fabrication facility in southern Israel. This represents the company's largest-ever investment in a manufacturing facility. Intel's expansion aims to strengthen global semiconductor supply chains and reduce reliance on singular geographies like Taiwan. The new Fab 38 plant will be built alongside Intel's existing Fab 28 facility in Kiryat Gat. Construction has already begun, with operations slated to start in 2028 and serve until 2035. Intel expects to create thousands of local jobs as well. The company will receive a reduced 7.5% corporate tax rate and has committed to $16.6 billion in local procurement. The grant comes amid Israel's ongoing conflict with Palestinian militant group Hamas.
However, Intel's decades-long presence and investments in the country showcase economic priorities persevering. Its key processor technology was and is being designed in Israel labs. The Kiryat Gat expansion aligns with Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger's strategy of manufacturing diversification through mega-investments across the US, Europe, and Israel. It follows the company's record $20 billion fab project in Ohio. With significant government subsidies at each site, Intel aims to restore market dominance against rivals like AMD and Nvidia through scale of manufacturing. The new Israeli fab will complement Intel's lineup of leading-edge technologies and help maintain Israel's reputation as a global semiconductor hub.
Source:
Reuters
However, Intel's decades-long presence and investments in the country showcase economic priorities persevering. Its key processor technology was and is being designed in Israel labs. The Kiryat Gat expansion aligns with Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger's strategy of manufacturing diversification through mega-investments across the US, Europe, and Israel. It follows the company's record $20 billion fab project in Ohio. With significant government subsidies at each site, Intel aims to restore market dominance against rivals like AMD and Nvidia through scale of manufacturing. The new Israeli fab will complement Intel's lineup of leading-edge technologies and help maintain Israel's reputation as a global semiconductor hub.
65 Comments on Intel's Largest Ever Chip Fab Investment will be a $25 Billion Facility in Israel
Immediately thinking of hate speech is really dragging the conversation into the gutter and says more about what's in your mind than in OP's.
This isn't new.
nocamels.com/2018/06/tel-aviv-tech-hub-world/
www.bbc.com/news/business-15797257
www.forbes.com/sites/adrianbridgwater/2020/02/21/how-israel-became-a-technology-startup-nation/?sh=70250ac1780e
"Most of the western is reliant on fabs located in really sketchy geopolitical areas... I know what will fix it! Let's invest 25BN into Tel Aviv!"
Ireland, Arizona, New York, Ohio, Germany, Malaysia, Poland, Israel. Seems pretty diverse to me.
1) People are bombarded with news about the place being a warzone 24/7.
2) Most people can't add 2+2 and don't realize Israel is a huge tech hub.
Maybe, if the goal is to diversify away from geopolitical risks, that's not a wise investment.
Most of the same concern could be said of South Korea, Japan, or pretty much any S. American or African country. Outside of the west, most of the world is not known for its stability. There's pretty much zero chance that Israel is going anywhere, so it's as good a spot as any.
Sorry couldn't resist.
Seriously. My comment had nothing to do with hate or love or whatever.
By contrast, 140 Christians were slaughtered in Nigeria over the Christmas holiday, Venezuela has been nationalizing industries at will for decades and is near a shooting war with the UK over an oil field in Guyana, North Korea has a new nuclear reactor that's making plutonium 4-5X faster than before, China is effectively invading small Philippine islands unchecked, and there's a proxy war with a nuclear superpower in Europe.
So no, I don't think there's anything special there.
tens of billions in Europe, in the us in Israel.
Intel is in position now to leapfrog TSMC at the 2nm node. Specifically, they should have 20A in 2024 with Arrow Lake, which will have backside power delivery from the get go.
TSMC won't have a high power N2 node with that until 2026.
spectrum.ieee.org/intel-20a