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Philippines Chip Industry Wants Help From Taiwan’s TSMC

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
b7941e5d5806bafab354585124133a23


(Bloomberg) -- The Philippines is trying to enlist Taiwanese chip giants in an effort to expand in semiconductors, a bid to catch up with its neighbors who are emerging as significant suppliers in the industry.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and United Microelectronics Corp. are among companies the Philippines is reaching out to as it seeks equipment and expertise to build out chip fabrication operations, said Dan Lachica, head of the Southeast Asian country’s main electronics industry group. The association is working with Philippine officials in Taiwan to talk with the potential partners.

“What I am hoping is that TSMC or UMC or some other company aspiring for wafer fabs overseas is to consider: send us your depreciated equipment, and in exchange, we’ll train the Filipino workers that you can deploy in your global operations,” Lachica said.

The country of more than 100 million people trails neighbors such as Malaysia and Singapore in the complex industry of chip manufacturing, where plants can require billions of dollars in initial investment. Taiwan is the world leader, and its companies including TSMC are expanding overseas to alleviate potential risks related to tensions between the island and the Chinese government.

TSMC representatives didn’t respond to a request for comment. “It is UMC’s policy not to comment on market speculation,” a UMC spokesperson said in an email.
The Philippines is betting that its low costs and ample workforce could help attract manufacturers. Talent shortage is one of the main challenges for global chipmakers from the US to Malaysia — the industry will need more than 1 million additional skilled workers across the world by 2030, Deloitte has estimated.

Taiwan and the Philippines enjoy a trade relationship, and both have recurring tensions with China. Beijing views Taiwan as a breakaway province and has repeatedly threatened invasion. Meanwhile, Philippine boats have clashed with Chinese vessels as the countries spar over the disputed South China Sea.

The pitch by Lachica’s group, the Semiconductor and Electronics Industries in the Philippines Foundation Inc., is part of the country’s attempt to diversify beyond chip testing and packaging, a less advanced part of the manufacturing process that carries thin profit margins.

“We’re moving up the value chain as well in terms of IC design and hopefully, semiconductor wafer fab,” Lachica said.

The Philippines has lost ground to neighbors like Vietnam in recent years after a revamp of local incentive programs led to the flow of advanced manufacturing elsewhere, according to Lachica. The country’s electronics and semiconductor exports are set to contract by 10% this year because of inventory corrections, before rebounding by 5% next year, he said.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has backed a bill seeking to change the incentive regime to attract more foreign investors. Meanwhile, efforts backed by the US and Japan to build Philippine infrastructure bode well for the industry’s prospects.

“We are handicapped by the aggressiveness of Vietnam, Indonesia and Malaysia,” Lachica said. “We need to come up and essentially tell the world that the Philippines is open for business again.”

 
What about no? Where is this vast workforce? How much of a trained workforce in operating chip factories do they even have in the Phillipines? AFAIK they have some packaging facilities and that is about it. You need a highly skilled workforce to operate a chip fab, not menial laborers.

It also does not solve the US problem of having facilities at a safe enough distance from China.
 
The Philippines is betting that its low costs and ample workforce could help attract manufacturers. Talent shortage is one of the main challenges for global chipmakers from the US to Malaysia — the industry will need more than 1 million additional skilled workers across the world by 2030, Deloitte has estimated.

I advise to not to look too much into the workforce. Were it all about it, then South Asia would've been in the lead, as it produces far, far more semiconductor professionals than it employs for many decades. No countries which enter the race today will be able to catch up, simply because tens of thousands of top tier engineer cannot be "produced," they need 10+ years to get experience, and I am not talking about R&D workers, but shift leads, and regular senior fab technicians.
 

"assembly and test facility" i.e. packaging.

Interesting we used to send masks there back in the day.

I am assuming that assembly and packaging dont need mask , back end isnt my fortè
 
Interesting we used to send masks there back in the day.
I am assuming that assembly and packaging dont need mask , back end isnt my fortè
That would be an actual fab, yes. But AFAIK TI only has chip fabs in Japan, Germany, China, and the US. All their latest fab announcements are for US fabs as well. I assume these new fabs will consolidate all the work which used to be done at the older fabs in the US.
 
That would be an actual fab, yes. But AFAIK TI only has chip fabs in Japan, Germany, China, and the US. All their latest fab announcements are for US fabs as well. I assume these new fabs will consolidate all the work which used to be done at the older fabs in the US.

TI Chengdu still going?

Used to send masks there also

Well we sent many masks to Philippines , wonder what they were for?

Will check tomorrow , maybe TI Clark buy the mask , buy they were sent elsewhere
 
The Philippines is trying to enlist Taiwanese chip giants in an effort to expand in semiconductors, a bid to catch up with its neighbors who are emerging as significant suppliers in the industry.
TSMC is one of the most desired companies on this planet, to cooperate with. GO TSMC
 
We manufactured/manufacture bump mask for the TIFAB in Philippines , I assume they are part of the backend process

That facility to a lot of work for a wide variety of customers!!!
 
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