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A major earthquake in Taiwan has halted some TSMC chip production lines, potentially impacting the manufacture of Apple devices (via Bloomberg).

Apple-Silicon-Teal-Feature.jpg

A 7.4-magnitude earthquake struck Taiwan in the early hours of the morning, killing at least nine people, injuring hundreds, and causing significant damage to infrastructure, including disrupting operations at several TSMC key manufacturing sites. Sources familiar with TSMC's operations said that the company's N3 fab in Tainan suffered structural damage, with beams and columns broken, leading to an outright halt in production. EUV machines, essential for manufacturing processes below 7nm, have stopped, and research and development labs have been subject to significant damage, such as cracked walls. Another fab in Hsinchu reported broken pipelines and extensive damage to wafers, necessitating a halt in production.

Some of TSMC's high-end chips, such as the 3nm A17 Pro in the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max, require round-the-clock operations and a stable vacuum environment for several weeks. As a result, some high-end chips already in production are likely to have been spoiled even if they were not damaged directly.

All of the custom silicon processors in Apple's devices are supplied by TSMC. As such, the earthquake's immediate effects on TSMC's facilities have raised concerns about potential delays in Apple's product supply chain. The chipmaker has taken immediate action to assess the damage and initiate recovery procedures, with some production lines expected to resume operation today, but the full extent of the impact on Apple's supply chain remains uncertain.

TSMC has historically placed a strong emphasis on disaster preparedness, especially following a major earthquake in 1999. The company has since implemented rigorous seismic management measures designed to mitigate the risks posed by earthquakes, including post-earthquake inspections, the installation of dampers and shock absorbers, and the integration of equipment vibration reduction technologies.

Apple is in the midst of ramping up production for its upcoming product releases, so significant disruptions in the supply of TSMC-manufactured chips could potentially delay product launches or limit availability. That being said, Apple is known for its robust supply chain management strategies, which will likely help mitigate the immediate effects of the earthquake on the company's product timelines and availability.

Article Link: Major Earthquake in Taiwan Halts Some Apple Chip Production Lines
 
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My point is that for years and years many have tried to convince Apple to diversify away from China and SE Asia, yet they haven’t made any real effort to do so.

So now, when all the eggs are in one basket, they’re in real trouble. And it’s not just earthquakes. They could be political changes that necessitate alternatives as well.
 
so your point is that you dont give a sh about those people....TSMC is second to none in manufacturing , so until they have a new facility up and running in state or somewhere else.....
Excuse me?!

The article addressed Apple so I commented about the article.

This is not a news aggregator site, it’s a tech site. Maybe you should take a read of the forum rules.
 
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Hopefully they recover and take care of their people there, was a huge quake apparantly.

TSMC is several years ahead of everyone else in die shrinking the chips and so are the choice to keep things moving for Apple (and any other tech company needing those for an advantage). TSMC also specifically wants its top fabs in the home country (cause every company would) but also partly as they feel its a bit of insurance for protection from neighbors who might want to exert control over the country. A very sticky wicket quite frankly.
 
My point is that for years and years many have tried to convince Apple to diversify away from China and SE Asia, yet they haven’t made any real effort to do so.
I doubt that US will walk away from the SE Asia in a foreseeable future. A 600 million strong market of a SE Asia is way too valuable and without it there is no way of ever "building back better".
 
Terrible for the people living there.
For Apple, probably a minor hit to profits.
If the disruption to TSMC production is really bad, they can for Mac's revert to Intel or AMD for some interesting 'special editions'.
 
  • Wow
Reactions: gusmula
Peoples homes and businesses destroyed... people hurt and worse... and people are concerned if it will affect future Apple product launches

The world is heading in the wrong direction... and in any case... its been known, since the beginning that such manufacturing is not built for resilience against war, environmental disasters etc
 
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