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Samsung Starts to Build $7 Billion Chip Plant in China

Sept. 12, 2012
When completed in 2014, the factory will produce 10,000 12-inch wafers each month.

South Korea's Samsung Electronics (IW 1000/15) said Wednesday it had started building a new $7 billion chip plant in the Chinese city of Xian -- its biggest-ever investment in the country.

The plant, scheduled to come on line in 2014, will produce the advanced 10-nanometer-class NAND flash memory chips used for devices such as smartphones and computers, the firm said in a statement on ground-breaking day.

The world's largest memory chipmaker said earlier the plant, when completed, would produce 10,000 12-inch wafers each month.

"Reinforcing the company's support for its customers worldwide, the China facility will improve Samsung's global supply chain, making it easier for many of its customers to expand in the region," it said.

The world's largest technology firm that makes popular gadgets from smartphones to tablet PCs, Samsung also provides chip components to other IT firms including its industry rivals Apple and Nokia.

The firm said it had also started a program to collaborate with researchers in Xian, home to 37 universities and 3,000 technology research centers.

Samsung leads the global NAND flash memory market with a 37.4% share in the first quarter of this year, followed by Japan's Toshiba and the U.S. firm Micron, according to research firm IHS iSuppli.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2012

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