Ask HN: What happens if TSMC is destroyed?
What happens (to the US, EU, or whatever else you might have insight on) if TSMC is destroyed, say during a Chinese invasion of Taiwan? Are we facing a "1-year supply shortage while companies retool to US/EU fabs", or "nobody gets new electronics/cars for 5 years while whole chips are designed and fabbed, and their containing systems completely reworked"?
My current working hypothesis: the former case sounds inconvenient - the latter sounds like it would cause riots in at least some countries (most notably the US with our electronics addiction and high silicon-per-capita ratio).
However, I have very little experience with electronics design or semiconductor logistics. I know that there are a few silicon wizards floating around - any projections on the above?
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[ 7.0 ms ] story [ 100 ms ] threadAutarky isn't always the best solution, nor the cheapest solution, but sometimes it's a good solution. Or at least a safe one. Just do it peacefully...
Taiwan, and Asian semi ecosystem at large is unique, and irreplaceable, and not only TSMC as such.
The fall of Taiwan will be:
1. Loss of unique, black box knowhow which people never put into any patents
2. Loss of single source consumables - a lot of chemical industry, metallurgy, plastic, machinery all exclusively used only by semi industry
3. Loss of 80% of world's semi workforce, both brains, and hands
4. Loss of services companies, and big part of the ecosystem supporting the fabs, like semiconductor logistics
5. Loss of unique semi equipment makers, not on the level of losing the crown jewel (steppers,) but nevertheless making it instantly impossible to build any new fab line until a replacement is redeveloped from scratch. People who say that Taiwan is not big in semi tool making don't have an idea.
So if you completely erase this part of the world, the maximum the world can hope for within 5 years is just to restore functioning of a single pre-existing fab per country.
All its outputs will be no doubt be only used for defence electronics.
In other words Facebook, Amazon, Google, and all tech industry all bye bye. Modern "disposable electronics" barely lasts 2-3 years.
South Korea, or Japan will be there first, and they will demand The King's Ransom for fab access.
The first new fabs built from scratch will only be possible to make in 7-9 years term, using eighties era technology, and that is if the war will end quickly.
It's more likely US & PRC will coordinate to save TW fabs with TW leadership cooperation because US controls inputs via supply chain and save trillions in US advanced industies. TW leadership will cooperate because not wiping out advanced western industry is the one golden ticket they have of comfortable retirement in the west. PRC gains leverage and access by hosting fabs. 100,000s of TW semi engineers has a comfortable future working status quo. It's basically the only arrangement that works out for everyone versus semiconductor mutually assured destruction. Reality is US has leverage via tech sanctions during peacetime, PRC has leverage during wartime by threatening to destroy all east asia semi supply chain which will kick world back to 80s instead of 00s. It's in everyone's interest not to normalize disrupting semi production.
Your comment is dead.
It's US publication, they're not blackmailing themself unless drive for strategic clarity. But not compelling deterrence. Response in TW media to report was leave TSMC alone. Nothing official I've read suggest blowing up fabs for US protection since US protection is for those fabs. Like I don't doubt TW will play blackmail card if viable, but US can't slap enough free missile defense to make TW semi supply chain defendable.
On point two, perhaps. In the meantime, I assume it will take decades to reshore supply chains independent of TW making for some uneasy peace. I'll be stocking up on hardware.
E: Shame, a lot of your comments are dead actually.
Within 5 years or so, China would become the biggest producer as it has the money available for the greatest investment. The US would continue its decline from being the top dog in the 1980s to becoming pretty much irrelevant in chip production, though they would still be amongst the top designers for a while longer.
The bigger loss would be the more affordable talented Taiwanese engineers that the west doesn't really have. If they somehow got out of Taiwan before the fabs are destroyed, their work could be recovered relatively quickly.
I could accept it if the Taiwanese were just better at this sort of thing than Americans were, but do we really need to be offshoring strategic resources because it's too expensive to pay engineers middle-class wages?
The USA, in contrast, still imports much of the talent in this area. Our kids weren’t even very interested in computer science until recently, and software has sucked away talent from EE and other hardware disciplines.
It is a profoundly American idea that one must be interested in profession in order to pursue it. And it is one that greatly endears this country to me, along with its people, culture, history, and freedom.
The same does not necessarily apply in south or east asia. For them it is prestige, necessity, and the respect of family. Such motivations obviously exist here in America of course, but I wonder how much of it was simply "we in government want you to do this and will pay you well and make you look good in front of your family".
>and software has sucked away talent from EE and other hardware disciplines.
I blame vc's
It may look so from the West. Big name equipment like steppers, and deposition tools come from the West, but a lion share of everything else is a product of the local supply chain.
Without that, setting up new fabs elsewhere is not possible.
Because some globally single source consumable are too locally produced, you cannot talk of even resuming production at existing fabs.
Fellows funded by some suspicious foundations in the West arguing for "we will coax TSMC to build a fab in America, and then we can betray them" are pushing an exact line as Beijing.
First, they are not engineers, and have no idea how the industry functions. Fabs will stall within weeks after running out of consumables from Taiwan.
Second, America cannot "weather the storm." There will be absolutely no arrangement possible how the US can regain access to semi once this is over in any way.
What matters is not revenue, but physical manufacturing, and where it is.
The global industry today is paralysed by lack of nothing more than few cent microcontrollers.
As I said above, restoring working of existing fabs will require rebuilding the entire Asian supply chain for chemicals, spare parts, consumables, and services.
LAM, KLA, Advanced Materials, ASML — their tools are 50%+ foreign parts, and materials.
As I said, we produce a lot of high-end semiconductors in the USA: the supply chains are already there, they are simply more expensive. If consumer semiconductor production had to move back to the states, we would have to repurpose those supply chains, they probably would never be as cheap, but we are talking 10 or 20%, not something horribly crippling to the economy.
Non-fluoropolymer high temperature super low outgassing plastics, and plastic parts used in semi equipment for example. That's an expertise that simply never existed in the West, and will have to be built from scratch, taking precious years.