Taiwan hit with 7.4 earthquake, TSMC evacuates some fabs, begins inspections (Updated)

Taiwan April 3, 2024 earth quake
(Image credit: US Geological Survey)

On Wednesday at around 7:58 am local time, a 7.4 magnitude earthquake struck off of Taiwan's east coast, with the epicenter 18km from Hualien City. The country issued Tsunami warnings while Japan and the Philippines also braced for possible flooding. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, this is the most powerful quake Taiwan has experienced since a 7.7 event that occurred in 1999. The USGS also says that a 6.5 aftershock occurred 13 minutes later.

At around 9 am local time, Bloomberg reported that TSMC, one of the world's largest chipmakers, had evacuated some plants as a precautionary measure. Wen-Yee Lee, a semiconductor reporter in Taiwan, tweeted an update from TSMC stating that some facilities had been evacuated as part of "internal company protocols."

The good news is that TSMC's foundries are located on the west side of Taiwan, while the quake occurred off of the east coast. The Financial Times has a great map showing the location of TSMC's 12 Taiwan fabs, which are spread out between Tainan, Taichung, Hsinchu City, and Taoyuan City. According to Asia Tech Wire, the chip giant stated that it estimates a 6-hour disruption in production. 

According to CNN, as of 11 am Taiwan time, there were at least 26 building collapses with at least 15 of the buildings in Hualien County. More than 91,000 households were without power. Videos posted on Reddit show significant shaking in Taipei, with Taipei 101, one of the world's tallest skyscrapers, shaking.

Aside from the human cost, this quake could also significantly affect chip production, potentially causing shortages or raising the prices of key components. This would, in turn, lead to higher costs for everything from laptops to TV sets.

TSMC is not the only company that manufactures major components in Taiwan, however. According to Bloomberg, UMC (United Microelectronics Corporation)  has also evacuated its fabs. These are also located on the west side of the island, which means that they were likely not hit by the quake.

It's important to note that even short disruptions in production can lead to big price hikes, and Taiwanese earthquakes have a long history of disrupting the global electronics supply chain. After the 1999 quake, prices for DRAM modules jumped by more than 25 percent, and shortages continued for months.

We'll have to see what the effect of this latest disruption is on the prices of key PC components such as CPUs and DRAM. 

Avram Piltch
Avram Piltch is Tom's Hardware's editor-in-chief. When he's not playing with the latest gadgets at work or putting on VR helmets at trade shows, you'll find him rooting his phone, taking apart his PC or coding plugins. With his technical knowledge and passion for testing, Avram developed many real-world benchmarks, including our laptop battery test.
  • watzupken
    Jensen is going to be black faced if he can't get enough Blackwell chips ready for sale at ridiculous price.
    Reply
  • bit_user
    7.4 magnitude is pretty major. I definitely want to know what sort of impact this will have on supply chains, but...

    Considering the 26 building collapses, let's try not to forget the human toll, here.
    Reply
  • The_Future_Is_Here
    I'll be brutally honest here,

    The price of some comodity silicon chips increasing is frankly irrelevant when put in contrast to the potential loss of life that has likely occurred as a result of this Natural Disaster.

    People have died, buildings have collapsed, people are likely still trapped under rubble.
    This is a horrible disaster to have occurred and I can only hope that as many people as possible made it through the incident alive & well.

    To all the people of Taiwan, my hopes & prayers are with you all.
    Reply
  • KyaraM
    I'm also far more concerned with the people dead, injured, and possibly trapped and cut off than the tech supply, honestly. It's good they evacuated the factories, probably reducing risk of further casualties. I hope for the victims and hope that there won't be any more aftershocks...
    Reply
  • umeng2002_2
    And here we go. It doesn't matter if these earthquakes actually disrupted production. What matters is that companies will use it as an excuse to raise prices.

    I wouldn't be surprised if intelligence agencies make huge buys now, and the companies selling to them cloak the sales as production losses from the earthquake, as they've done in the past.
    Reply
  • newtechldtech
    bit_user said:
    7.4 magnitude is pretty major. I definitely want to know what sort of impact this will have on supply chains, but...

    Considering the 26 building collapses, let's try not to forget the human toll, here.

    26 buildings collapsed > only < ... they have good engineers for sure and no corruption ... Turkey lost half a million houses totally collapsed in last year earthquake of 7.8 scale ..
    Reply
  • Joseph_138
    Get ready for graphics card apocalypse part 2. :rolleyes:

    Buy your upgrades while you can still afford them.
    Reply
  • P.Amini
    I agree, every life is priceless and it's heartbreaking but the reality is we all are continuing to live our lives and do our stuff, if we can/want to help then it's great but regardless of that, life is going on... and this is a tech news which is doing it's job by viewing this aspect of the disaster. Regards..
    Reply
  • 4freedomssake
    As others have stated, I'm more concerned about the toll on people's lives and they're well-being than anything that has to do with electronics right now. They are in my prayers.
    Reply
  • artk2219
    watzupken said:
    Jensen is going to be black faced if he can't get enough Blackwell chips ready for sale at ridiculous price.
    I don't think thats the biggest concern here.
    Reply