Taiwanese chip makers call on government to stockpile helium, liquid natural gas — TSIA pleads for strategic supplies as US and Iran sign ceasefire in Middle East

TSMC
(Image credit: Getty / Anadolu)

The Taiwan Semiconductor Industry Association (TSIA) has called on the government to build a strategic supply of helium and liquified natural gas (LNG) just as the U.S. and Iran signed a two-week ceasefire agreement in the Middle East. According to Nikkei Asia, TSIA is calling on Taipei to follow in the footsteps of Japan and the U.S.A. and build a strategic inventory of these supplies, which are critical for the semiconductor industry. The island currently has about 11 days of strategic LNG supplies, which is the fuel used by more than 40% of its power plants, and no helium stockpiles.

Iran blockaded the Strait of Hormuz when the U.S. began its bombing campaign against the country in March of this year, disrupting the flow of several materials, like Aluminum, helium, and LNG, that are key to the global semiconductor supply chain. While TSIA members had enough short-term inventory to tide them over for a few weeks, it was already starting to face shortages by the third week of the war. Helium is used across the various stages of chip manufacturing, from cooling to chemical flushing, and has no other viable substitute. This means that without this gas, production in semiconductor fabs would grind to a halt.

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Jowi Morales
Contributing Writer

Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.

  • watzupken
    I agree that the government should maintain a healthy buffer of key resources in the event supply gets disrupted. However, the government should prioritize their citizens over corporations. In times of emergency, the authorities are voted in to serve the people. Corporations should be developing their own resiliency plans, instead of relying on the government to serve them.
    Reply
  • beyondlogic
    Corporations need to do there own legwork it's not for the government to sort. Warning signs were there from the start that this could go down.
    Reply