Sept 22 (Reuters) - Two of the world's largest
chipmakers, TSMC and Samsung Electronics ( SSNLF ),
have discussed building potential chip projects in the United
Arab Emirates in coming years which could be worth more than
$100 billion, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday.
Top executives at TSMC have visited the UAE recently and
talked about a plant complex on par with some of the company's
largest and most advanced facilities in Taiwan, WSJ said citing
people familiar with the interactions.
South Korea-based Samsung Electronics ( SSNLF ), the maker of
smartphones, TVs and memory chips, is also considering major new
chip-making operations in the country in the years ahead, the
paper said citing unnamed sources.
TSMC and Samsung did not immediately respond to a Reuters
request for comment.
Senior figures at Samsung Electronics ( SSNLF ) visited UAE recently
and discussed the idea, WSJ reported, adding that the
discussions were still in the early phases and may face
technical and other hurdles.
Under initial terms being discussed, the projects would be
funded by the UAE, with a central role for Abu Dhabi-based
sovereign development vehicle Mubadala, according to WSJ.
The paper added that the broader goal would be to increase
global chip production and help bring prices down without
hurting chip-makers' profitability.
As tech deals in the region speed up, Washington has become
increasingly concerned about the UAE and other Middle Eastern
countries becoming a conduit for advanced U.S. AI technology
reaching China.