You are right in that its political, but that doesn't make it bad. Getting chip production inside the country, instead of a place china has been threatening to invade for years? Thats a VERY smart move, yet still political.This has boondoggle written all over it. Brought to you on the backs of US taxpayers.
Yet, Taiwan is one of the most seismically active places on the planet.Finally, Arizona doesn't get earthquakes.
They had to make do because, well, where the hell else were Taiwanese people supposed to start their own fabs? Where possible, fabs tend to choose dry, seismic inactive palaces. Arizona is a common location as a result. Japan had a tons of fabs and it’s a big deal every single time there’s a slight tremor because they have to shut everything down and they lose a bunch of wafers.Yet, Taiwan is one of the most seismically active places on the planet.
Do you believe these plants in the US will be profitable on their own? If not, will Americans be prepared to spend additional tens of billions once this first tranche is spent?This is about economic security.
One more thing to keep in mind - these guys are building two fabs in the same geographic region in which Intel has major operations, and is also building out a new fab. And this happens to be a geographic region with an extreme climate that makes enticing others to come from outside the region. Even worse, the location of the fab itself is kinda remote, especially from the concentration of semiconductor talent currently residing in the Phoenix metro, which is mostly in the East/Southeast due to the proliferation of Intel and Motorola derived operations (NXP and On Semiconductor).It seems likely that two things are going on...
America truly does not have the talent that they've used in Taiwan to create the world's most sophisticated fabs.
Also, the inherent human power struggle between laborers and owners/management. Those with power or in charge, tend to abuse that power, with laborers getting the short end of the stick.
From the outside, it's hard to know where TSMC falls on the spectrum for each of these. Then each of us has a different tolerance for what requires activism and pushback.
Either way, I'm excited to see a TSMC plant opening up in America. I think our country and the world in general is better off when things critical to modern civilization are spread around the globe.
I don’t think Americans realize just how high construction costs here are compare to other countries. We routinely spend billions on projects that better paid union workers finish in other countries for a quarter of the price. Even Nordic building costs are a small, small fraction of ours."TSMC has cited US building costs being more expensive than costs in Taiwan as another setback" - what an idiotic argument, all costs related to construction should have been known to a couple percent long before doing the deal. yeah, it costs more per square whatever to build in the usa than in taiwan. duh.
Sure, that makes sense when it comes to operating the fab, installing some of the more esoteric equipment that is not shared with older fabs, etc.I haven't followed all the links in the story, but the idea of getting the fab up and running with TSMC employees who know how do to things the TSMC way, and then onboarding/training US workers later doesn't seem unreasonable. It may be an uncomfortable truth that the US is behind in semiconductor manufacturing, but even if it's only a little bit true, I doubt that you can take an engineer from Intel or TI and drop them in to TSMC's operation without retraining.
Those two are very tightly connected though right?They are talking about building the fab not running the fab.
In the same vein, I can’t help wondering whether a cultural disconnect is part of the problem. The fact that TSMC asked a union contractor to hire non-union workers implies that they didn’t understand how inflammatory that question would be to a union shop.The disconnect is a rather more Pacific Rim attitude to worker treatment, I would expect.
Not sure why I’m getting downvoted… Why do you think we broke a treaty and refused to defend Ukraine? It’s because they don’t have anything we want, like oil. If they did, you bet your ass we’d be over there fighting Russia.
You make my point for me on why building in Arizona is better than building in Taiwan. See a few examples:Not sure the earthquake issue makes sense. Taiwan is on the 'ring of fire' the enormous arc of subduction zones that trigger the majority of earth's seismic activity.
And it sure the hell isn't in a desert.
Semico Research considers fabs in Japan, Taiwan, and the west coast of the United States to be in the high-risk areas for earthquake activity.
Texas has the right weather and geological stability for such a facility and a good supply of tech-savvy workers.
It is also important for [fabs] to avoid airports or geological fault lines so that vibrations don’t disrupt the machinery.
Crowded, expensive, and prone to earthquakes, the Santa Clara Valley would seem the worst place to build a fab, and geologically speaking it is.
“A chip factory cannot shake, not even a microscopic amount,” he said, adding that they set such factories into the bedrock to keep them still. “Even a 0.5 Richter shake can ruin an entire crop of chips.”
TSMC has had a US Fab for over 2 decades and even successfully resisted a unionization push there. They are not unsophisticated or unfamiliar with the way things work in the US.In the same vein, I can’t help wondering a cultural disconnect is part of the problem. The fact that TSMC asked a union contractor to hire non-union workers implies that they didn’t understand how inflammatory that question would be to a union shop. I am not at all surprised by the reaction to that question.
Also, American union culture can be fairly weird¹ , especially to outsiders encountering it for the first time.
I’ve been a member of the Teamsters, and I’ve also covered trade shows as a journalist where attendees were strictly forbidden from changing a burned-out lightbulb in their own booths.
Rather, they had to pay a union electrician $75 to do it for them. Not $75/hr—$75/bulb. (This was in Anaheim, CA in the late ‘90s). It often took a hour or two for the electricians to respond, some of them were incredibly smug to the people working the booths. Those people were often hourly or contract workers themselves; if those smug electricians were trying to stick it to The Man, their aim was terrible.
It was legitimately exasperating. I found myself exasperated for the vendors, even though I understood why that rule existed and didn’t have any lightbulbs to change.
Plus, union culture can be overtly hostile to perceived enemies, and significant parts of that culture have hair-trigger enemy detectors.
This is all to say that TSMC might simultaneously:
(a) have a real point about worker skill,
(b) have a weak understanding of American union culture,
(c) have some legitimate frustration with that culture, and
(d) be doing some fairly sketchy things to circumvent labor laws/union rules.
——————
¹ I obviously have mixed feelings about unions. They’re eager to remind us that they brought us the weekend—and they did!—but they’re somewhat less eager to remind us that they also brought us Derek Chauvin.
What's so bad about Arizona vs. Texas or elsewhere? And isn't the cost of living lower there than in tech bastions like CA and MA?
Canadians are stealing our thunder. We are no longer the top destination for legal skilled immigration. Why spend years trying to get here, often being stuck behind a queue of hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers, when you can apply for a residential permit in Canada. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-66249400Congress needs to fix legal skilled immigration asap, separately from the policy nightmare that is illegal immigration and border crossing, DACA and everything else that is nearly unsolvable without making a lot of people unhappy.
Legal skilled immigration is an economic issue, and migration/illegal immigration/path to citizenship is a human/social issue. Congress conflates these two and doesn't solve anything.
There is another article on that topicWhy in the world are they building in Arizona? A place where the temps are sky rocketing from climate change. If cooling is such an issue, then that seems a rather riske place to fabricate. Look at the enormous coolers in the background of the pic.
Maybe it's cheap labor? Or significant tax breaks from Arizona?
IBM put a bunch of fabs and ancillary facilities and such in upstate NY, Vermont, and across the border in rural Quebec. meets the 'needs water', 'geologically stable' , but ' large technical workforce' ? not so much. I was being recruited for a position in one of the sites and was surprised at how they seemed to think that the location was a bonus...
Taiwan got its start in manufacturing in the late 80s, when chip fabrication was much less demanding in terms of constraints. We're taking the very beginnings of the sub-micrometer era... I think in 1987 when TSMC was founded chip sizes were at about the 800nm scale.Yet, Taiwan is one of the most seismically active places on the planet.
And the vegetarians brought us Hitler, they never take credit for that, the louts.——————
¹ I obviously have mixed feelings about unions. They’re eager to remind us that they brought us the weekend—and they did!—but they’re somewhat less eager to remind us that they also brought us Derek Chauvin.
I'm fairly certain we never had a treaty promising to defend Ukraine. Feel free to provide a link if I'm misinformed.Not sure why I’m getting downvoted… Why do you think we broke a treaty and refused to defend Ukraine? It’s because they don’t have anything we want, like oil. If they did, you bet your ass we’d be over there fighting Russia.
Do you believe these plants in the US will be profitable on their own? If not, will Americans be prepared to spend additional tens of billions once this first tranche is spent?
I do think the work culture aspect is important to consider. TMSC is planning a chip facility in Japan. I'm not a betting man, but if I were, I would bet on that plant being more successful long-term.