TSMC involved in “negotiations to manufacture top-tier Nvidia AI chips in Arizona”

Asian Financial Daily
4 Min Read
Disclosure: This website may contain affiliate links, which means I may earn a commission if you click on the link and make a purchase. I only recommend products or services that I personally use and believe will add value to my readers. Your support is appreciated!

TSMC, the world’s leading chipmaker, is in talks with U.S. technology giant Nvidia to produce its Blackwell artificial intelligence chips at the contract manufacturer’s new factory in Arizona, sources said.

Three sources told Reuters that TSMC is already preparing to start production early next year.

NVIDIA blackwell waferThe product, launched by the company in March, has so far been manufactured at TSMC’s factory in Taiwan. The company is seeing high demand for the chip from customers involved in generative artificial intelligence and accelerated computing, which it says is 30 times faster at tasks like providing answers to chatbots.

See also: China imposes sanctions on U.S. military companies over arms sales to Taiwan

The agreement, if finalized, would win another customer for TSMC’s Arizona plant, which plans to start high-volume production next year.

TSMC and Nvidia declined to comment. The sources spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks are confidential.

Apple and Advanced Micro Devices are existing customers of the Arizona plant, two of the sources said. Apple and AMD did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

However, although TSMC plans to produce the front-end process of Nvidia’s Blackwell chips in Arizona, these chips still need to be shipped back to Taiwan for packaging.

Two sources said this is because the Arizona plant does not have the necessary substrate-on-wafer-on-wafer (CoWoS) capacity for Blackwell’s wafers.

TSMC’s CoWoS production capacity is currently all located in Taiwan.

Taiwan’s TSMC, the world’s largest contract chip maker, is investing tens of billions of dollars to build three factories in Phoenix, a project that has received approval Huge subsidies from the U.S. governmenthoping to bring semiconductor manufacturing back to the United States.

  • Reuters Additional input and editing by Jim Pollard

See also:

Chinese industry body says buying U.S. chips ‘unsafe’

China strikes back at U.S. ban, halts export of key chip materials

Nvidia in talks with China despite looming new U.S. chip restrictions

China’s chip industry faces third wave of U.S. export restrictions

The United States and TSMC sign a US$6.6 billion chip agreement, and other agreements will be signed soon

China’s Huawei and SMIC will “increase” production of latest artificial intelligence chips

Trump says he will impose high tariffs on China if it occupies Taiwan

New U.S. chip equipment export rules will hit Taiwan and ASEAN countries

TSMC stock price falls due to Trump’s remarks that “Taiwan should pay for defense expenses”

China’s blockade of critical minerals could lead to global chip shortage

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He served as a senior editor at The Nation for more than 17 years.

Share This Article