China’ Semiconductor Manufacturing International (SMIC) said it will make an investment of $8.87 billion to build a chip plant in Shanghai.
The largest chipmaker in China aims to capture more business arising from the global chip shortage in automotive and electronics industries. Rivals including Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSMC) and GlobalFoundries are also making huge investment for expanding capacity in chip facilities to meet demand.
SMIC agreed to build a production line with monthly capacity of 100,000 12-inch wafers in the Lingang Free Trade Zone (FTZ) in the Pudong district of China’s business hub.
In China, SMIC has a 200mm wafer fabrication facility (fab) and an effectively controlled joint-venture 300mm fab for advanced nodes in Shanghai; a 300mm fab and a majority-owned 300mm fab in Beijing; 200mm fabs in Tianjin and Shenzhen.
The plan will focus on integrated circuit foundry and technology services on process nodes for 28-nanometers and above, backed by a joint venture majority-owned by SMIC.
The joint venture partner is the Lingang FTZ, and the company said it would seek other investors in the firm with registered capital of $5.5 billion.
Other companies with plants in the zone are Contemporary Amperex Technology and Tesla.
SMIC is partly backed by China’s state-affiliated chip fund.
SMIC is on a U.S. government blacklist that denies it advanced manufacturing equipment from U.S.-based technology suppliers. The United States cited national security concerns and SMIC has denied having ties to China’s military.
The measures disrupted the company’s plans to move into high-end chip making, but its financial performance has been strong as the chip shortage has boosted demand, Reuters reported.