Wednesday, April 3rd 2024

Magnitude 7.4 Earthquake in Taiwan Halts Production at TSMC and Other Foundries

At 07:58 local time, Taiwan was rocked by a magnitude 7.4 earthquake on the east coast which was felt nationwide and as far as to the southeastern parts of China and southern Japan. It caused some major damage in the east coast city of Hualien where the epicentre of the quake was located, as well as surrounding areas. The earthquake reportedly left nine people dead and over 900 people injured islandwide. TSMC, UMC, PSMC and Innolux all halted some of their production lines in the Hsinchu Science Park on the west coast of the island, although this is said to have been as a preventive step, rather than caused by actual damage from the earthquake.

All the above-mentioned companies also evacuated their staff from their factories due to the intensity of the quake, as it reached a magnitude of around four or five almost island wide. The semiconductor manufacturers are all inspecting their fabs now to make sure none of the equipment was damaged by the earthquake. Innolux also has a factory in the southern city of Kaohsiung and has reported that it has suspended production in Hsinchu, but that production in Kaohsiung wasn't affected. Local media in Taiwan hasn't made any mention of the likes of Micron or other chip manufacturers, but it's likely that the situation is similar, since all of these companies are located in the same areas on the island. Aftershocks have continued throughout the day and there's a risk for further big earthquakes to follow in the coming days.
Images courtesy of the Taiwan Central Weather Administration (CWA).

Update 15:11 UTC: Updated with an official statement from Micron below.

Micron Technology, Inc. today reported that following the earthquake that struck Taiwan on April 3, 2024, all of Micron's team members have been accounted for and reported to be safe. Our thoughts are with those affected and their families. We are evaluating impact to our operations and supply chain. We will communicate changes to delivery commitments to our customers after this evaluation is completed.
Sources: Focus Taiwan, Taiwan News, Central Weather Administration
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41 Comments on Magnitude 7.4 Earthquake in Taiwan Halts Production at TSMC and Other Foundries

#26
starfals
I just hope for 3 things:
1 Everyone is okay
2 China wont get any ideas... you know what i mean.
3 GPU/CPU prices wont go up a ton.
Posted on Reply
#27
R-T-B
bonehead123Well, at least THIS time, they have a legitimate reason for production interruptions, unlike the usually suspect "factory fire/flood/power failure" which has been used by other companies in the past to jack up prices and trigger the supply/demand greed-mongering :)

But OTOH, hopefully everyone who may have been injured or requiring assistance got it quickly and will recover asap...
Honestly I feel nearly all those have legit events as well (no fooling local fire/whatever authorities), its the reaction to the event then that can be seen as iffy.
Posted on Reply
#28
remixedcat
This is why we need more fabs here in the USA, YESTERDAY!!
Posted on Reply
#29
mechtech
remixedcatThis is why we need more fabs here in the USA, YESTERDAY!!
In San Fran!!!!!!!!
Posted on Reply
#30
WonkoTheSaneUK
mechtechIn San Fran!!!!!!!!
Just in time for "The BIG one"! :cool:

(By which I mean that SF might not be the most "earthquake-proof" part of the USA to build a chip fab)
Posted on Reply
#31
Ahhzz
Several people in this thread.... disappoint me. We understand there will be a technological effect from this earthquake. Factory productions have been halted, and an impact on pricing cannot be avoided. That's the technology side of things. But to completely and callously dismiss the impact on people's lives and make jokes about it... You people can do better. Be better.
Posted on Reply
#32
Slizzo
remixedcatThis is why we need more fabs here in the USA, YESTERDAY!!
That's what the CHIPS act has been all about, of course. Unfortunately it takes time to build these facilities out, and train people to run them.
Posted on Reply
#33
remixedcat
SlizzoThat's what the CHIPS act has been all about, of course. Unfortunately it takes time to build these facilities out, and train people to run them.
Intel keeps pushing the Ohio date over and over tho...
WonkoTheSaneUKJust in time for "The BIG one"! :cool:

(By which I mean that SF might not be the most "earthquake-proof" part of the USA to build a chip fab)
Ohio and Appalachia are the best areas cuz we're cheaper, more and cheaper land, lower taxes, and easier weather and no fault lines...
Posted on Reply
#34
bug
remixedcatOhio and Appalachia are the best areas cuz we're cheaper, more and cheaper land, lower taxes, and easier weather and no fault lines...
Geography certainly helps, but everything else is not a clear plus. See how Musk built his Gigafactory in the middle of nowhere only to find out later he has to shuttle talent all the way there.
Posted on Reply
#35
remixedcat
bugGeography certainly helps, but everything else is not a clear plus. See how Musk built his Gigafactory in the middle of nowhere only to find out later he has to shuttle talent all the way there.
but california and the west coast in general is getting very expensive and increasingly volatile... Biggest exodus is west coast states since they are so pricey. Also there's talent in more places than california. Most of those people can't afford to move and are stuck w crappy jobs to get them by, like me, I'm really good with IT stuff but no IT jobs in my area, no way to move to a "better state" without me downgrading my living situation (fully paid off 4BR2BA 2K sqft house) to the point I'm sleeping in a literal closet cuz I can't even keep 400 in my bank account. Many are in my exact situation here that have a lot of skills but nobody wants to give us a chance and they think we are all dumb hillbillies when we aren't all like that. Most companies are not WFH friendly since it's "post covid" now... so that leaves people like me with little choices...
Posted on Reply
#36
bug
remixedcatbut california and the west coast in general is getting very expensive and increasingly volatile... Biggest exodus is west coast states since they are so pricey. Also there's talent in more places than california. Most of those people can't afford to move and are stuck w crappy jobs to get them by, like me, I'm really good with IT stuff but no IT jobs in my area, no way to move to a "better state" without me downgrading my living situation (fully paid off 4BR2BA 2K sqft house) to the point I'm sleeping in a literal closet cuz I can't even keep 400 in my bank account. Many are in my exact situation here that have a lot of skills but nobody wants to give us a chance and they think we are all dumb hillbillies when we aren't all like that. Most companies are not WFH friendly since it's "post covid" now... so that leaves people like me with little choices...
I didn't say it's a bad idea. just that the problem is complex and some things can be both pros and cons, depending on which aspect matters most. Full disclosure: since I haven't built a fab myself, I don't know what matters the most.
Posted on Reply
#38
droopyRO
starfals2 China wont get any ideas... you know what i mean.
Well, i heard that they already did some "exercises". Most likely to probe and test the Taiwanese military response in a crysis.
Posted on Reply
#39
bonehead123
droopyROWell, i heard that they already did some "exercises". Most likely to probe and test the Taiwanese military response in a crysis.
They've been doing that for a while, and will continue to do so in the future, according to someone I know who knows someone who has knowledge of these things, who says that the probing/testing is the REAL crysis, because the info gained is used for the planning & preparations of other actions :)
Posted on Reply
#40
droopyRO
bonehead123They've been doing that for a while, and will continue to do so in the future, according to someone I know who knows someone who has knowledge of these things, who says that the probing/testing is the REAL crysis, because the info gained is used for the planning & preparations of other actions :)
All major players do that, ever since the end of WW2 and the start of the Cold War until today, and will continue as long as we have the technology to do it. Stuff like this en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_HOMERUN
/offtopic
Posted on Reply
#41
ThrashZone
AhhzzSeveral people in this thread.... disappoint me. We understand there will be a technological effect from this earthquake. Factory productions have been halted, and an impact on pricing cannot be avoided. That's the technology side of things. But to completely and callously dismiss the impact on people's lives and make jokes about it... You people can do better. Be better.
Hi,
At least there's an update
www.techpowerup.com/forums/threads/micron-provides-update-following-earthquake-in-taiwan.321166/
Posted on Reply
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