Infineon’s $8 Billion Plant to Boost Malaysian Chip Ambitions
(Bloomberg) -- Malaysia is gaining more heft in the global supply chain as Infineon Technologies AG opens a major semiconductor manufacturing complex in the country, the Southeast Asian nation’s leader said.
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“We are now able to receive and expand the technology. It shows Malaysia is now going up the ladder,” Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said at the opening ceremony of the first phase of Infineon’s €7 billion ($7.7 billion) production site in the northern Malaysian district of Kulim on Thursday.
Anwar highlighted the need for the local government and universities to help train the necessary talent to better accommodate Kuala Lumpur’s efforts to bulk up the local chip industry. This comes as major governments around the world are spending tens of billions to bolster the domestic production of semiconductors, a commodity that’s regarded as one of the most strategic goods for countries to develop emerging technologies.
Infineon Chief Executive Officer Jochen Hanebeck said that the new Kulim campus progressed ahead of its original schedule and it will become the world’s largest silicon carbide power semiconductor manufacturing site once the second phase is also completed.
The new plant will focus on making power semiconductors that can help with decarbonization in automotive, industrial and data center fields. It is expected to create a total of 4,000 jobs eventually, according to Infineon.
Infineon’s investments in Malaysia highlight the Southeast Asian nation’s potential to attract more tech investments at a time when major chip firms are seeking alternatives to China and Taiwan for manufacturing given increasing geopolitical uncertainties.
Malaysia has in past years emerged as a global hub for packaging and assembling, the final process before chips are ready for use in smartphones, data centers and electric vehicles. Major players including Intel Corp., ASE Technology Holding Co. and Amkor Technology Inc. have taken advantage of its skilled and lower-cost labor and proximity to major markets, especially as Covid and US-Chinese tensions disrupted the flow of chips globally.
In recent years however, China — eyeing packaging as a way to turbocharge locally made semiconductors — has emerged as a major assembly center, while neighboring countries including Singapore are also competing for multinational chip investment.
In response, Kuala Lumpur has implemented policies to boost its attractiveness, including $5.6 billion of incentives and the setting up of a chip-design hub near the capital. It is also trying to draw more investments in wafer production, the front-end manufacturing considered to be the most valuable part of the chipmaking process, from the likes of Infineon and others to upgrade its capabilities.
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