DutchNews, March 21, 2022
| An ASML cleanroom where a euv machine is being assembled. Photo: ASML |
Semiconductor makers face a two-year
shortage of critical equipment because Dutch chip machinery maker ASML is
unable to meet demand fast enough, the company’s chief executive Peter Wennink
has told the Financial Times.
ASML, based in Veldhoven, is a key player in the
global chip industry, producing machines which Intel, Samsung and TSMC all use
to make advanced semiconductors. The company also has a monopoly in the field
of EUV, or extreme ultra violet, based lithography machines.
‘Next year and the
year after there will be shortages,’ Wennink told the paper. ‘We’re going to
ship more machines this year than last year and . . . more machines next year
than this year. But it will not be enough if we look at the demand curve. We
really need to step up our capacity significantly more than 50%. That will take
time.’
The FT said Wennink’s comments come as the semiconductor industry is
speeding up investment in new production to meet a global shortage of chips,
and that analysts expect the market to double to $1 tn by 2030.
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