12 June 2021

SEMICONDUCTOR 'FABS' BUILT IN DRY-STATE ARIZONA CREATE MORE DEMANDS FOR WATER: THE MOST PRECIOUS COMMODITY HERE IN THE DESERT

Mainstream Reports: MAKING CHIPS TAKES LOTS OF WATER
Dream 88 - Conserve water NOW ~ 😨😨 No rain in Taiwan ~ SO.. we need to  use water wisely. PLZ~ PLZ~🤓🤓 | Facebook
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TSMC To Build World’s First Exclusive Water Plant Following Taiwan Drought

Even as rains smatter Taiwan and a typhoon rages nearby, the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) has announced plans to build a new facility to aid it during times of water shortages. Despite recent rain on the island, Taiwan is still facing a historic drought, reducing its reservoir levels to dangerously low levels. To help it manage similar crises in the future, TSMC's senior vice president of Europe and Asia sales, Ms. Lora Ho, revealed details of the facility in a video conference, according to reporting by The Nikkei Asian Review.

TSMC Claims Wastewater Plant Will Be First Of Its Kind In The World

While TSMC's decision to build the facility comes as the company deals with Taiwan's ongoing drought, it's unlikely to help the company deal with the current shortages. Ms. Ho believes that the plant will be fully operational by 2024, and it will start limited operations by the end of this year.

Crucially, the plant will be for TSMC's exclusive use and setting it up will undoubtedly help the company improve its water-related enterprise risk management. To deal with the current crisis, the company has turned to water tankers to help meet some of its needs. These tankers have also been used to test groundwater for chip fabrication, a process which requires copious water use due to high purity standards and numerous chemicals involved in the process, each of which has to be washed off before a silicon wafer can progress to the next stage in manufacturing.

Based on the fab's daily water use in 2019 (the last time it shared the data through a sustainability report), this output should enable TSMC to meet a little less than half of its needs. Cleaning water for the chipmaking process has high standards for purity, and TSMC should incorporate these in its new plant if it intends to mitigate its dependence on external water sources for manufacturing. . .

In addition to facing a water shortage, the fab is contending with a global automobile chip shortage and increasing consumer electronics demand. Both of thee combined have stretched TSMC's production capacity, as it is responsible for the bulk of the global chip demand - especially for advanced process nodes such as 7nm and 5nm. Apart from TSMC, only Samsung Electronics' chip arm Samsung Foundry can manufacture chips using these processes.

Industry analysts have also feared whether the currently high chip demand will lead to inventory correction next year as companies are unable to clear their stock. TSMC and U.S. chip giant Intel Corporation believe that while it's impossible to rule out such a correction, it's unlikely to take place at least until the second half of next year.

 
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Why Intel and TSMC are building water-dependent chip factories in one of the driest U.S. states

By Sam Shead | CNBC

The biggest semiconductor manufacturers in the world are quickly trying to build new factories as the global chip crisis continues to wreak havoc on a plethora of industries.

U.S. semiconductor giant Intel announced in March that it plans to spend $20 billion on two new chip plants in Arizona. Separately, TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company) said it was going to build a $12 billion factory in Arizona, and chief executive C.C. Wei said Wednesday that construction had already begun.

The Grand Canyon State may not, however, seem like the most obvious place for a chip “foundry” or “fab” since the high-tech manufacturing plants guzzle millions of gallons of water every day.

At present, in the face of climate change, Arizona is facing a deepening water crisis and some of the state’s all-important aquifers have an uncertain future.

Arizona received just 13.6 inches of rainfall on average per year between 1970 and 2000, according to the NOAA National Climatic Data Center, making it the fourth driest state nationwide. Conversely, Hawaii and Louisiana recorded the highest levels of average yearly precipitation in the U.S. over the same time frame, reporting 63.7 inches and 60.1 inches, respectively.

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Intel, TSMC are building water-dependent chip plants in Arizona

https://www.cnbc.com › 2021/06/04 › why-intel-tsmc-a...
https://www.cnbc.com › 2021/06/04 › why-intel-tsmc-a...
Jun 4, 2021 — Why Intel and TSMC are building water-dependent chip factories in one of ... Arizona received just 13.6 inches of rainfall on average per year ...
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