In a big shift to their manufacturing operations – and a big political win domestically – TSMC has announced that the company will be building a new, high-end fab in Arizona. The facility, set to come online in 2024, will utilize TSMC’s soon-to-be-deployed 5nm process, with the ability to handle 20,000 wafers a month. And with a final price tag on the facility expected to be $12 billion, this would make it one of the most expensive fabs ever built in the United States.

Operating over a dozen fabs across the globe, TSMC is responsible for a significant share of global logic chip production, particularly with leading-edge and near-leading-edge processes. The company has become perhaps the biggest winner amidst the gradual winnowing of fabs over the past two decades, as manufacturer after manufacturer has dropped out, consolidating orders among the remaining fabs. And with GlobalFoundries dropping out of the race for cutting-edge manufacturing nodes, TSMC is one of only three companies globally that's developing leading-edge process nodes – and one of the only two that’s a pure-play foundry.

This success has become both a boon and a liability for TSMC. Along with Korean rival Samsung, the two companies have seen massive growth in revenues and profits as they have become the last fabs standing. As a result, TSMC serves customers both locally and globally, particularly the United States and China, the two of which are not enjoying the best of relations right now. This leaves TSMC trapped in the middle of matters – both figuratively and literally – as China needs TSMC to produce leading-edge chips, and the United States is now increasingly reliant on TSMC as well following GlobalFoundries’ retreat.

As a result, the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company is going to do something it’s never done before, building a near-leading-edge fab in the US, outside of its home base of Taiwan. The new facility, set to be constructed in Arizona, will use the company’s 5nm process, which is currently TSMC’s most advanced manufacturing process. And while this will no longer be the case by the time it comes online in 2024, when 3nm processes are likely to be available, it would still make the Arizona facility among the most advanced fabs in the world, and by far the most advanced contract fab in the United States.

The Arizona facility would be joining TSMC’s other US fab, which is located in Camas, Washington. It, like TSMC’s other non-Taiwanese-fabs, is based around older technologies, with the Camas fab in particular focusing on building flash products using relatively large process nodes (350nm to 160nm). As a result, the Arizona fab represents a significant shift for TSMC; it’s not the first US fab for the company, but it’s the first time TSMC has built such an advanced fab in another nation.

All told, the Arizona fab is set to be a medium-sized facility – a “megafab” in TSMC parlance – despite its use of an advanced manufacturing node. The 20,000 wafers per month throughput of the fab is well below TSMC’s largest “gigafabs” in Taiwan, which can move more than 100,000 wafers per month. As a result while the fab will add to TSMC’s 5nm capacity, it won’t become a massive part of that capacity. Though with an expected price tag of $12 billion, it will still be a very expensive facility to build.

According to TSMC, the primary impetus for building the fab – and especially to build it in the United States instead of Taiwan – is specifically to have high-end production capacity within the United States. With GlobalFoundries dropping out of the race for leading-edge nodes, the US government and other sensitive fabless chip designers are in want of another leading-edge facility within the US to build their chips. Given their location, TSMC’s Taiwanese fabs are seen as security risk, and the US would prefer to be self-reliant rather than relying on a foreign partner – a concern that’s been magnified by the current coronavirus pandemic and the supply chain issues that has created.

The end result is that while the fab is not explicitly reserved for military and other sensitive chips, it’s hard to imagine a scenario where the big commodity chip manufacturers such as AMD and Qualcomm don’t continue to use TSMC’s larger and more efficient fabs in Taiwan. In other words, while the Zen processor you’re playing World of Tanks on isn’t likely to come from Arizona, the chip that goes into an actual tank just might. Unaspiringly then, the planned Arizona fab comes with a lot of interest and support from both Arizona and the US Government, for both strategic and business reasons.

Interestingly, while the desire for more domestic fabs within the US has been well known, the US’s two major domestic fabs find themselves on the outside looking in with this deal. Intel has long tried to lure customers to its own contract manufacturing business, including making pitches to the US government, with little luck. Meanwhile GlobalFoundries is currently the US government’s preferred fab for military hardware – inheriting those fabs and the resulting business from IBM – but whom faces the prospect of slowly losing business as government customers switch to newer manufacturing processes. So in some respects it’s a bit surprising to see outsider TSMC land such a deal, though there are sizable political concerns involved as well.

At any rate, TSMC’s Arizona fab is expected to break ground in 2021, with completion scheduled for 2024. At which point it is anticipated to employ over 1600 workers as TSMC becomes the United States’ second leading-edge foundry provider.

Source: TSMC

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  • Wilco1 - Sunday, May 17, 2020 - link

    That guy was quite right. Today the x86 PC market is about 280 million chips a year. However about 25 billion chips a year use Arm. Most are simple low-power embedded chips that are in every electronic device, from flash drive to internet router, washing machine to car. 28nm is a very advanced process for these, and TSMC makes a lot of money from these old processes.
  • ilt24 - Friday, May 15, 2020 - link

    @voodoobunny ... "that's nearly $142/die, to amortize the cost in a single year."

    In their press release TSMC said ... "TSMC’s total spending on this project, including capital expenditure, will be approximately US$12 billion from 2021 to 2029." To be providing that large a time period, I imagine that included a hopeful one or two node upgrades along the way.
  • TimSyd - Saturday, May 16, 2020 - link

    TSMC don't sell die, they sell wafers. Their customers sell the die.
    So all TSMC care about is what they can sell the wafer for, at 5nm something north of $20k or so (maybe less in 2024). So about 2.5 years to payback - probably 3 when you count running costs.
    BTW - not many in the Semi industry would accept 50% yield. 80% plus is the std "entitlement" yield. Closer to 90% with redundancy or recovery of down-bin/down spec product which fuses off non-functional areas.
  • peevee - Tuesday, May 19, 2020 - link

    Most defense spending goes to military contractors, the biggest being Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman, and not to any kind of DoD employees, be it soldiers or bureaucracy.
  • Sahrin - Friday, May 15, 2020 - link

    Makes sense to locate in Arizona; Intel operates leading-edge fabs in Chandler, AZ and Hillsboro, OR. The only other place in the US with leading edge fabs is Malta, NY (GF's Trusted Foundry) - but they've abandoned development.

    Actually, given the outcome of the recent GF v. TSMC lawsuit, I actually would've thought they might be inclined to locate in NY because it sounds like GF may be cooperating/licensing TSMC's processes going forward. But who knows.
  • Yojimbo - Friday, May 15, 2020 - link

    New York dare not try to give tax breaks again, the economics genius AOC would be out for their blood.
  • Solidstate89 - Saturday, May 16, 2020 - link

    Good. Having to bribe companies with tax breaks can go fuck off.
  • 1prophet - Saturday, May 16, 2020 - link

    For some things yes, but when you are competing against a country like China that thinks nothing of subsidizing their businesses to the point of being below cost in order to put the competition out of business you need to look at the bigger picture instead of being a self defeating ideologue,

    or worse a hypocrite that says no to domestic tax breaks and subsidies but has no problem buying the equivalent foreign made subsidized below cost products because of the cheaper price.
  • Sahrin - Saturday, May 16, 2020 - link

    >For some things yes, but when you are competing against a country like China that thinks nothing of subsidizing their businesses to the point of being below cost in order to put the competition out of business you need to look at the bigger picture instead of being a self defeating ideologue,

    Then you cut them out of the herd. Don't join them, beat them.
  • s.yu - Sunday, May 17, 2020 - link

    You speak as if there is a herd. There isn't one. Even the EU is on the verge of disintegrating, greatly accelerated by the economic impact of the virus, and there was never a unified diplomatic policy to begin with. I definitely support more flexibility in dealing with China. The Xi regime doesn't play by any rule so most of the self-binding ideologies in the west are gonna look pretty stupid in the face of Xi's ruthless offensive.

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