Officials with both Intel and Qualcomm say they will have no
problems getting products out to customers, despite concerns about
supply chain issues for many chip makers due to the ongoing troubles in
Japan.
Both companies said that their operations are
spread out enough geographically that a disaster like the one that has
struck Japan will not impact their operations too greatly.
In a statement to Bloomberg News,
Chuck Molloy, a spokesman for Intel, said the chip giant will be able
to continue manufacturing and distributing their processors. Intel
supplies more than 80 percent of the world’s computer chips.
“We will keep our commitment to our customers,” Molloy told Bloomberg. “Our general rule is that nothing is sole-sourced.”
For its part, Qualcomm released a statement March
16 saying that, like Intel, it has operations around the globe so that
a problem in one region won’t negatively impact the company’s entire
business.
“Based on a review of our extended semiconductor
supply chain, we do not foresee any significant impact in our ability
to supply product to our customers due to the events in Japan,”
Qualcomm, the leading chip maker for mobile devices such as
smartphones, said in its statement. “Qualcomm has multiple,
geographically diverse sources for supply as well as production
processes specifically designed to enable us to mitigate disruptions in
our supply chain.”
In the statement, Qualcomm also noted the question
of availability of BT (Bismaleimide Triazine) resin, which the company
uses along with epoxy-based laminates in chipset packages.
“To account for any potential disruption in BT
supply, we believe our use of buffer stock and adjustments to our near
term material mix will enable us to mitigate potential supply
disruptions to our customer base,” the company said.
Japan has been under siege since the 9.0-magnitude
earthquake and resulting tsunami hit the island nation March 11. In
addition, the country also has had to deal with the damage to some of
its nuclear power facilities and the threat of radiation getting into
the atmosphere.
Analysts have pointed out that Japan, along with
Taiwan, supply a large amount of the world’s semiconductors and other
computer components, such as NAND flash memory and DRAM parts. While
actual damage to facilities in Japan initially appears to be minimal,
the analysts have said supply chain problems and other issues—such as
rolling power outages—could hinder the manufacturing and shipping of
such components. They also warned of price increases.
"While there are few reports of actual damage at
electronic production facilities, impacts on the transportation and
power infrastructure will result in disruptions of supply, resulting in
the short supply and rising prices," analysts with IHS iSuppli said in a report March 14.
"Components impacted will include NAND flash memory, dynamic random
access memory (DRAM), microcontrollers, standard logic, liquid-crystal
display (LCD) panels, and LCD parts and materials."
Jim Handy, an analyst with market research firm Objective Analysis, said in a March 11 report that
given the size of the computer component industry in Japan—more than 40
percent of the NAND flash memory chips and about 15 percent of the
global DRAM supplies are made in the country, he said—any blip in the
manufacturing schedule could have a ripple effect throughout the tech
industry.
"A two-week shutdown would remove from production
a sizable share of each of these," Handy wrote. "It doesn't take a
large production decrease to cause prices to increase
dramatically. Objective Analysis anticipates phenomenal price
swings and large near-term shortages as a result of this earthquake."