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Tom’s Hardware
Tom’s Hardware
Technology
Andrew E. Freedman

TSMC resumes chip production following biggest earthquake in 25 years — incurred no damage to its critical tools

The Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. logo atop a building at the Hsinchu Science Park in Hsinchu, Taiwan.

TSMC plans to bounce back quickly following a massive 7.4-magnitude earthquake that hit Taiwan Wednesday morning, leading the company to evacuate some facilities.

Now, according to a statement received by Bloomberg, it seems that TSMC's most important equipment got by largely unscathed.

"There is no damage to our critical tools including all of our extreme ultraviolet lithography tools" TSMC's statement read in part.

Wen-Yee Lee, a semiconductor reporter based in Taipei, posted a full statement on X (formerly Twitter), translating a statement that says "the recovery rate of wafer fab equipment has exceeded 70%, and the recovery rate of newly built fabs (such as Fab 18) has exceeded 80%."

According to both statements, there is some equipment damage, but the most intricate machines seem to be OK.

It seems that TSMC will be resuming manufacturing overnight, though some time may be needed for a complete recovery.

TSMC is one of the largest players in the Taiwanese tech space, but it wasn't the only one to pause machinery or evacuate plants. Bloomberg notes that United Microelectronics Corp. was put in a similar position.

It can take an advanced chip months to make it through a fab, which requires perfect operation. It's extremely possible that some wafers were damaged from the quake, though we haven't heard such directly from TSMC.

TSMC is massively important as a contract chipmaker, producing designs from Apple, Nvidia, AMD, and even some from Intel. Most of its fabs aren't on the island's east coast, where the epicenter of the quake hit.

The 7.4 magnitude earthquake's epicenter was just south of Hualien City, and it killed 9 people and injured more than 1,000, according to the Associated Press. Taiwn's building codes and infrastructure may have helped not just TSMC's equipment but also prevented more property damage and loss of lives.

The quake came as governments worldwide have considered bringing chip production back home, and worry about consolidating production in a region that is both a potential military hot button and is also located near two tectonic plates. That's part of why the United States has given massive CHIPS Act subsidies to Intel and others to build and expand domestic fabs. TSMC is also building a U.S. fab in Arizona, and is expecting over $5 billion in incentives.

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