Japan quake disrupts world technology supply chain
Chip and NAND flash-memory manufacturers in Japan were affected by the earthquake and tsunami last week, but considering the circumstances the outlook could be far worse.
Japan is a central hub of the technological supply chain, and the consequences of the catastrophic 8.9 magnitude earthquake that hit the country March 11 are beginning to come into clearer focus.
Infrastructure, electric power supply and fears of meltdowns at nuclear plants are the biggest concerns for the people of Japan and its industries in the short term. Ports, airports, roads and rail lines have all been disrupted because of the quake with some of the major industrial export ports facing months of rebuilding before they'll be able to resume normal output.
Yet, it looks like some of the major manufacturers of NAND flash-memory wafers and other semiconductor plants were relatively unharmed outside of minor damage and power outages caused by the earthquake. NAND flash memory, used in devices such as USB drives, smart phones and tablets, has been a major driver of mobile computing over the last decade. Toshiba and SanDisk factories produce flash memory south of Tokyo. The epicenter of the earthquake and subsequent tsunamis was located in northeast Japan, approximately 250 miles from Tokyo.
According to the Wall Street Journal, the joint venture factories of Toshiba and SanDisk felt modest impact. Toshiba accounts for 35 percent of the world’s flash-memory output.
SanDisk issued a press release March 11 stating that its factories in Yokkaichi Mie Prefecture were operational as of Friday.
“The epicenter of the powerful earthquake was approximately 500 miles from Yokkaichi, Mie Prefecture, Japan, the location of the two Toshiba-SanDisk joint-venture semiconductor manufacturing plants, Fab 3 and Fab 4,” the SanDisk release stated. “Both fabs were down for a short period of time due to the earthquake and were back up and operational as of Friday morning, Pacific Time. There were no injuries to SanDisk employees based in Japan. SanDisk's current assessment is that there has been minimal immediate impact on wafer output due to the earthquake. SanDisk continues to assess the situation for any potential future impact that may arise from issues related to Japanese infrastructure and the supply chain.”
Related stories:
Tech helps relief organizations -- and scammers -- after Japan quake
Research firm IHS iSuppli Market Intelligence has released a report on the state of the Japanese technology industry and what some potential effects from the earthquake might be:
- Japanese suppliers accounted for more than one-fifth of global semiconductor production in 2010. Companies based in Japan generated $63.3 billion in microchip revenue in 2010, representing 20.8 percent of the worldwide market.
- Japan-headquartered companies in 2010 ranked No. 3 in semiconductor production among the world's major chip manufacturing regions.
- DRAM manufacturing in Japan accounts for 10 percent of the worldwide supply based on wafer production.
according to technology blog Engadget.
according to the Japan Times
NEXT STORY: Japan disaster provides opportunity for scammers