Advertisement

Samsung, Micron warn COVID-19 lockdown in Chinese city may impact chip production

FILE -- A visitor walks near the logo of Samsung Electronics at semiconductor exhibition in Seoul, South Korea, Thursday, Oct. 28, 2021. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man).

Samsung Electronics and Micron Technology, two of the world’s largest memory chip makers, warned that strict COVID-19 curbs in the Chinese city of Xian could disrupt their chip manufacturing bases in the area.

The lockdown in the city puts further pressure on global supply chains and adds to a torturous year for exporters facing sharply higher freight costs even as prices for raw materials including semiconductors skyrocket amid the pandemic.

The curbs could cause delays in the supply of DRAM memory chips, widely used in data centers, Micron said on Wednesday.

The stringent restrictions, which went into effect earlier this month, may be increasingly difficult to mitigate and have resulted in thinner staffing levels at the manufacturing site, Micron added.

Story continues below advertisement

Samsung Electronics also said on Wednesday that it would temporarily adjust operations at its Xian manufacturing facilities for NAND flash memory chips, used for data storage in data centers, smartphones and other tech gadgets.

The latest health and medical news emailed to you every Sunday.

Seoul-based analysts said chips made in Samsung’s Xian NAND plant mainly go to China with limited shipments heading overseas. Some of the biggest demand for the kind of chips made in the plant come from Chinese server companies, they added.

Chinese officials have imposed tough curbs on travel within and leaving Xian from Dec. 23, in line with Beijing’s drive to immediately contain outbreaks as they appear.

Click to play video: 'Consumer Matters: Global semiconductor chip shortage hitting auto industry harder than thought'
Consumer Matters: Global semiconductor chip shortage hitting auto industry harder than thought

The COVID-19 outbreak in Xian is the biggest seen by any Chinese city this year, with over 1,100 cases in total during the latest flare-up.

“We are tapping our global supply chain, including our subcontractor partners, to help service our customers for these DRAM products,” Micron said in a blog post.

Story continues below advertisement

“We project that these efforts will allow us to meet most of our customer demand, however there may be some near-term delays as we activate our network,” the company said.

Micron added that it was working to minimize the risk of virus transmission and had employed measures including physical distancing and on-site testing and was encouraging vaccination.

Samsung’s memory chip operation in Xian is one of the largest foreign projects in China. The tech giant has two production lines in Xian making advanced NAND Flash products, which account for 42.5% of its total NAND flash memory production capacity and 15.3% of the overall global output capacity, according to analysis provider TrendForce.

Samsung said in a late October earnings call that it had entered the July-September quarter with low inventory of NAND chips, and intended to normalize levels during that quarter.

It is expected to announce October-December earnings results in January.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru, Joyce Lee and Heekyong Yang in Seoul; Writing by Shri Navaratnam; Editing by Maju Samuel and Himani Sarkar)

Sponsored content

AdChoices