TSMC announced last year that it would build a plant in Dresden, Germany. The plant is originally expected to break ground as early as Q4 this year, but now it may start sooner. According to a report from Deutsche Welle, TSMC’s Dresden plant will begin construction within a few weeks, which means it will start this fall, aligning with the company’s previously announced timeline.
The TSMC Germany plant was initially scheduled to begin construction in the second half of 2024 and to start production by late 2027. The new plant is expected to create approximately 2,000 direct high-tech jobs. TSMC will hold a 70% stake in the plant, with Bosch, Infineon, and NXP each holding 10% stakes, and TSMC will operate the facility. The EU and the German government are subsidizing about half of the plant’s investment.
To ensure the plant can commence production smoothly in 2027, the city of Dresden is investing EUR 250 million to build an industrial water supply system and enhance the reliability of the local power grid.
The TSMC Germany plant is expected to use 28/22nm planar CMOS and 16/12nm FinFET process technologies, with a monthly production capacity of approximately 40,000 300mm (12-inch) wafers.
On the other hand, another global semiconductor giant, Intel, was said to have delayed its construction of Fab 29.1 and 29.2 in Magdeburg, Germany, as the new timeline pushed the start of construction to May 2025, according to a report by Tom’s Hardware, citing German media outlet Volksstimme.
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(Photo credit: TSMC)