Intel to invest $95 billion in European chip-making facilities
By Ishika Dangayach on Sep 07, 2021 | 05:37 AM IST
Intel Corp. intends to invest up to $95 billion in new
chip-making facilities in Europe, to increase production capacity during a worldwide chip supply bottleneck.
Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger said on Tuesday that the firm was
building two-chip facilities at a new site in Europe and may potentially expand
them further, bringing the total investment over approximately a decade to the
equivalent of up to 80 billion euros, WSJ reported.
The facilities would be built to meet the skyrocketing
demand for semiconductors as computers, automobiles, and other electronic
devices grow increasingly chip-hungry.
Intel announced intentions to commit production capacity to the auto-chip market at an Irish facility. It is also forming a chip-design
team to assist others in adapting ideas to make use of Intel's manufacturing
capabilities, the report stated.
According to the firm, Intel's contract chip-making division
has been courting new clients in Europe, particularly car makers.
Intel's manufacturing expansion in Europe is part of
Gelsinger's effort to make Intel a major contract chipmaker, producing
semiconductors not just for its use but also for businesses like Qualcomm Inc.
and cloud computing provider Amazon.com Inc, WSJ stated.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world's largest
contract chip producer, said this year that it will invest a record $100
billion in production capacity over the next three years.
The worldwide semiconductor scarcity has particularly harmed
automakers. Ford Motor Company and General Motors Co said last week that
they were reducing output due to a shortage of semiconductors.
The shares of the company are trading at $53.74
Source: WSJ