Industry experts yesterday applauded the government's long-term plan to cluster the makers of flat-screen panels and their components in the Tainan Science-based Industrial Park (TSIP).
"It is good logistically to have component suppliers in the same place as the panel manufacturers," said Debbie Wu (
"The glass sheets from which the panels are made are fragile and should not travel long distances, and there is the time-saving factor, not to mention better post-sales services," she said.
Since 1997, 93 companies have moved into the 1,038-hectare Tainan park, with a further 30 to 35 expected to follow this year, park administration spokesman Chen Chun-wei (
Employing 15,000, the companies are split evenly between flat-panel and computer-chip manufacturers.
Investment plans for the park currently top NT$1.3 trillion, Chen said.
One of the companies is the country's second-largest maker of thin film transistor liquid crystal display (TFT-LCD) panels, Chi Mei Optoelectronics Corp (奇美電子). On Tuesday Chi Mei raised NT$9.5 billion to fund the construction of a more advanced and more efficient fifth-generation (5G) factory in the Tainan park that will build 17-inch panels for televisions.
"Our next fab will definitely be in the TSIP," spokesman Eddie Chen (
It is a good idea to cluster TFT-LCD companies in the TSIP as it saves a lot on logistics costs, Chen said.
"With enough of us here it may also persuade our upstream suppliers to locate in the TSIP," he said.
Rival Hannstar Display Corp (
TFT-LCD component manufacturers are also setting up shop in the park. In March, Hannstar set up a joint venture in the park to produce color filters, an essential flat-panel component.
Backlight and other color-filter makers are also moving to the park.
But Tainan faces competition.
"Creating a TFT-LCD cluster is a good idea, but the problem is there are several choices including Hsinchu and Taichung," said Frank Su (
"AU Optronics Corp (
AU, the nation's largest TFT-LCD producer, has a 5G fab in Longtan, near Taoyuan.
Some parts, like the integrated circuits (ICs) that drive the functions of flat panels, may not make it so far south. For driver-IC designers, the most important factor is research and development, Su said.
"Engineers are not too keen on moving to Tainan," he said.
IC-design houses do not need much space for their facilities either, so the extra space available in Tainan is not an issue, he said.
The industry will therefore have two clusters in the future, one in Tainan, the other in the north.
Tainan has also benefited from space constraints at the more established high-technology cluster in Hsinchu, attracting more advanced 12-inch semiconductor fabs that cannot be accommodated next to their 8-inch equivalents.
"The Hsinchu Science-based Industrial Park has no more land for expansion," said George Wu (吳裕良), a chip-industry analyst with Primasia Securities Co in Taipei.
"The TSIP is an overspill for Hsinchu, but as 12-inch fabs are being concentrated there, TSIP will become much more important in the next 10 years," he said.
The chip industry is now cutting semiconductors from disks of silicon or wafers measuring 12 inches in diameter, yielding more chips at a lower cost than the current standard 8 inches.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manu-facturing Co (
United Microelectronics Corp (
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