Korea's SK Siltron to invest $597 mn in silicon wafer production

The firm is ramping up manufacturing facilities as it expects the chipmaking market to rebound following short-term downturn

 SK Siltron's wafer plant in Gumi, North Gyeongsang Province (Courtesy of SK Siltron)
 SK Siltron's wafer plant in Gumi, North Gyeongsang Province (Courtesy of SK Siltron)
Jeong-Soo Hwang 1
2022-09-30 11:16:18 hjs@hankyung.com
Korean chipmakers

South Korea’s SK Siltron Co. will invest 855 billion won ($597.4 million) to expand its 300-millimeter (12-inch) silicon wafer manufacturing facilities. The company decided on the budget at the meeting of its board of directors on Sept. 29.  

Silicon wafers are key materials for manufacturing semiconductors, with 300-mm wafers used for making microprocessor unit chips and complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) image sensors within digital cameras and smartphones.

In the first half of 2023, the silicon wafer maker will review an additional investment of 400 billion won in the plant.

SK Siltron has been constructing a silicon wafer production plant in the National Industrial Complex in Gumi, North Gyeongsang Province, investing 1.05 trillion won since March.

The new plant on a 42,716 square-meter site will start mass production in the first half of 2024, meeting surging demand of global clients.

If the budget for an additional 400 billion won investment is approved, SK Siltron will have invested a combined 2.3 trillion won in silicon wafer production by 2026.       

Despite the slowdown in the chipmaking industry, SK Siltron is actively boosting investment in mass production to secure a competitive edge in the global market in a few years.    

The global semiconductor market is expected to rebound after a short-term downturn, and major chipmakers in Korea and overseas are expanding facilities for the long term, an SK Siltron official said.    

More than 90% of global silicon wafers are produced by several companies, including Japan’s Shin-Etsu Chemical Co. and Sumco Corporation, Taiwan’s GlobalWafers Co., Germany’s Siltronic AG and SK Siltron.

Write to Jeong-Soo Hwang at hjs@hankyung.com
Jihyun Kim edited this article.

SK Hynix bets on 2025 memory upturn with $11 billion new plant

SK Hynix bets on 2025 memory upturn with $11 billion new plant

SK Hynix's DRAM plant in Icheon SK Hynix Inc., the world’s second-largest memory chipmaker, will spend 15 trillion won ($11 billion) over the next five years to build a new memory plant, expecting an industry upturn by 2025.The South Korean chipmaker said on Tuesday it will break ground o

SK Siltron to invest $300 mn in US capacity expansion

SK Siltron to invest $300 mn in US capacity expansion

From left, SK Siltron CEO Jang Yong-ho, SK E&S Vice Chairman & CEO Yu Jeongjoon, South Korean Trade Minister Yeo Han-koo and US Trade Representative Katherine Tai look at a wafer produced at SK Siltron’s Auburn factory on March 16. Auburn, Michigan – South Korea’s sili

SK Siltron to ramp up silicon wafer output from 2024

SK Siltron to ramp up silicon wafer output from 2024

SK Siltron employees display silicon wafers produced at its factory South Korean silicon wafer maker SK Siltron Co. on Wednesday announced a plan to spend 1 trillion won ($810 million) on its domestic capacity expansion by the first half of 2024, from which it plans to ramp up output.It will ki

SK Group’s Chey rebuts FTC charges of unfair business practice

SK Group’s Chey rebuts FTC charges of unfair business practice

SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won attends an FTC session over allegations of an unfair business practice South Korea’s Fair Trade Commission has imposed a fine of 1.6 billion won ($1.3 million) on SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won and the conglomerate’s holding company SK Inc. over allega

(* comment hide *}