In June, TSMC Chairman Mark Liu told shareholders that the chipmaker had begun assessments on setting up manufacturing operations in the European country
World’s largest chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) is reportedly mulling to establish a plant in Germany and is in early talks with the German government for the same.
As per a report by local Taiwanese news media, TSMC senior vice president of Europe and Asia sales, Lora Ho informed that various factors like government subsidies, customer demand and the talent pool, would influence its final decision.
In June, TSMC Chairman Mark Liu told shareholders that the chipmaker had begun assessments on setting up manufacturing operations in the European country.
TSMC has underway to build up new capacity around the world including a $7 billion semiconductor factory in Japan, as well as a $12 billion facility in Arizona set to start mass production in early 2024.
Meanwhile, TSMC has begun pilot production of 3-nanometer chips, and expects to be producing them in volume at the end of 2022.
TSMC has kicked off pilot production of chips built using N3 (namely 3nm process technology) at its Fab 18 in southern Taiwan.
Currently, Apple uses TSMC’s 5nm processors for the M1 chips and it is expected that TSMC’s 3nm processors will power the next generation of Apple Silicon.
Compared with the 5nm process, the 3nm gate-all-around (GAA) node boosts performance by 30 per cent, lowers power consumption 50 per cent and takes up 35 per cent less space.