Vietnam wants to compete with Taiwan by establishing its first wafer fab

zohaibahd

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In brief: The Vietnamese government has just approved the construction of the country's first-ever wafer fabrication plant. It's an ambitious project with a total investment of VND 12.8 trillion (~$500 million), and construction is expected to be completed before 2030. But it doesn't end there. The country also aims to become one of the world's leading semiconductor nations between 2040 and 2050.

TrendForce reports that the facility will focus on producing specialized chips for high-tech applications like AI, defense tech, and more. It has some serious financial backing as well, with the local government pledging to cover up to 30% of the cost, plus tax incentives. A special steering committee led by Vietnam's Prime Minister will also oversee everything.

This push shouldn't come as a total surprise. Over the last couple of years, Vietnam has actively engaged in negotiations and discussions with major chip companies from the US, South Korea, Taiwan, and other leading semiconductor nations. Closed-door talks took place with prominent players like GlobalFoundries and Taiwan's Powerchip Semiconductor, though no deals have been made public yet.

However, the master plan extends far beyond this project. Last year, the Prime Minister signed off on Vietnam's semiconductor strategy through 2050. It's an ambitious one, divided into three phases.

Phase 1 calls for establishing at least 100 chip design companies, one manufacturing plant, and 10 packaging/testing facilities by 2030. Phase 2 will expand that footprint massively to 200 design firms, two fabs, and 15 packaging/testing sites in the 2030-2040 timeframe. Finally, Phase 3 aims to increase these numbers to 300 design houses, three manufacturing plants, 20 packaging/testing facilities, and achieve revenue targets exceeding $100 billion annually by 2050.

Achieving these targets won't be easy. Industry insiders have pointed out that building an advanced chip fab can cost $50 billion or more – making Vietnam's $500 million budget seem like pocket change. The head of the US Semiconductor Industry Association even recommended Vietnam focus on low-hanging fruit like chip packaging first, before attempting advanced manufacturing.

However, Vietnam appears intent on an accelerated approach and is reportedly aiming to leverage foreign investment and partnerships with domestic tech companies like Viettel. It will use these to rapidly scale up its semiconductor capabilities across the entire supply chain. The country already hosts nearly 175 foreign semiconductor projects, collectively worth almost $12 billion, even as they are primarily focused on the packaging and testing segments.

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Can someone who is not directly next to China with a history of fighting wars with China maybe step up and become a leading semi conductor manufacturer?
 
Can someone who is not directly next to China with a history of fighting wars with China maybe step up and become a leading semi conductor manufacturer?
Maybe ask WHY a country next to China feels it needs to do this?

If you see the writing on the wall - that China will dominate that entire region (if not the world) - and you need to have SOMETHING to make the rest of the world care about you...
 
Maybe ask WHY a country next to China feels it needs to do this?

If you see the writing on the wall - that China will dominate that entire region (if not the world) - and you need to have SOMETHING to make the rest of the world care about you...
That doesn't answer his question at all. Why doesnt a country that ISNT right next to china get into the chip making game? If there's huge profits and international importance to be had......why doesnt anyone else try it? You telling me Argentina wouldnt want some of that dosh? South Africa? Egypt? How about Australia or places like Poland?
 
That doesn't answer his question at all. Why doesnt a country that ISNT right next to china get into the chip making game? If there's huge profits and international importance to be had......why doesnt anyone else try it? You telling me Argentina wouldnt want some of that dosh? South Africa? Egypt? How about Australia or places like Poland?
What’s even more confusing to me, it’s ASML from the Netherlands that makes the machines that make processors.

Europe literally makes and exports the machines but don’t use them itself? What’s with that?
 
That doesn't answer his question at all. Why doesnt a country that ISNT right next to china get into the chip making game? If there's huge profits and international importance to be had......why doesnt anyone else try it? You telling me Argentina wouldnt want some of that dosh? South Africa? Egypt? How about Australia or places like Poland?
I wasn't answering a question... merely posing my own...

But sure... here you go...
The reason most countries, especially democratic ones, won't invest in it is because there is a HUGE lead time... you have to invest BILLIONS and won't see any returns until over a decade later at the earliest... while democracies are great for freedom and stuff, they're NOT great at long-term plans as the politicians have no incentive to spend on something that only their successors will reap any benefit from.

When you have to make cuts to transportation, healthcare or education but the public sees you spending on something that MIGHT be profitable over a decade from now, it's hard to get votes..
 
What’s even more confusing to me, it’s ASML from the Netherlands that makes the machines that make processors.

Europe literally makes and exports the machines but don’t use them itself? What’s with that?
Prices of everything make it rather unatractive as well. In the Netherlands itself for example just buying the land needed would be stupidly expensive, the electricity would be utterly stupidly priced compared to most of the world. Not much chance in getting a break from environmental regulations either. The costs would be so much bigger it'd never be competitive and need state sponsoring forever. Considering how few people are churning out expensive products enmasse I don't think wages are actually that big of a contributor.
Perhaps Poland would be a good bet but TBF most of Europe is too tightly regulated, good need to sort regulations to do successfully like the US is doing by just going "global warming is a myth, let's have cheap energy" (I don't agree with that statement but I will acknowledge that it can boost the economy on the short term).

There's at least one thing Europe is blessed with and that's not much danger from mother nature. Earthquakes, floods and tornados are extremely rare, tsunamis aren't a thing. A lot of the tech industry keeps getting disrupted by mother nature leading to price hikes... I swear the HDD prices still haven't recovered from the floods in Thailand in 2011 or whenever it was.
 
LOL, Vietnam is a COMMUNIST country...and a puppet of China.
It's like the equivalent of proclaiming Poland is the puppet of Russia. That's absurd take. Do you know how many wars did they take to break off the big brother China? For how long? It's millennium of fighting. Looks it up, five times the total times the US existing.
 
It's like the equivalent of proclaiming Poland is the puppet of Russia. That's absurd take. Do you know how many wars did they take to break off the big brother China? For how long? It's millennium of fighting. Looks it up, five times the total times the US existing.
Since the end of their war (it ended in 1990/91 I believe), tensions have certainly decreased over the past 30 years or so.... but yes, I think calling Vietnam a puppet of China is a bit premature.

While they both have the same political ideology, that doesn't exactly make them friends... but China has over a billion people so most countries in the area at least pretend to like them...
 
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