1/10/2013 2:00:15 PM
Times Union: Malta center a step toward $10B next-gen fab
Times Union
ALBANY — GlobalFoundries' $2 billion investment in its new Technology Development Center adjacent to Fab8 in Malta's Luther Forest Technology Campus is a stepping stone to the foundry's first next-generation semiconductor plant, CEO Ajit Manocha said Thursday morning.
Manocha, speaking at an event at the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering
at the University at Albany, said that GlobalFoundries was "committed
to New York state," and that the company would move ahead with the $10
billion Fab 8.2, as he called it, "when we are ready."
The Technology Development Center, officially announced Tuesday by the company and by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo,
will be a "collaborative space to develop end-to-end technologies" for
the next generation of semiconductor manufacturing, said Gregg Bartlett, GlobalFoundries' senior vice president and chief technology officer, who also spoke at the event.
GlobalFoundries
is among a consortium of five major chip manufacturers that's
developing the technology and manufacturing techniques needed to produce
microprocessors on 450-mm, approximately 18-inch, diameter silicon
wafers. Currently, the manufacturers use 300-mm, or 12-inch, wafers.
That work is taking place at the so-called G450C building, which is
nearing completion at CNSE. Others in the consortium include Intel, IBM,
Samsung and TSMC.
Manocha
on Thursday called the existing Malta fabricating plant Fab 8.1,
distinguishing it from the potential future fab, and said that more than
2,000 people now work inside the massive concrete structure, with
another 10,000 jobs surrounding the fab. He said that the Technology
Development Center would employ 1,000 people and create another 4,000 to
5,000 jobs outside the fab.
It wasn't clear whether the outside
jobs also included jobs in such sectors as retail and services, beyond
those that provide technological support to the fab.
Manocha also credited CNSE and Alain Kaloyeros,
calling the complex, also known as Albany Nanotech, "the most
prestigious institute doing innovation and research in
nanoscience" globally.
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