this post was submitted on 29 Sep 2025
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Are you sure this is the case? I've never heard of this before and was under the impression that raw materials were largely imported for the manufacturing processes. Is it possible you got mixed up with something else?
Am I sure? No, but I have a recollection of reading that the sand in Taiwan has a higher silicon content and is better suited to making wafers. You can make silicon from just about any dirt on earth, since it's virtually everywhere, but when you want to make a bunch for manufacturing, it's more effective to choose an abundant source as your starting point.
Well curiosity got the better of me, and the best sources I could find in ~an hour of researching suggest that they import most of the raw materials. For example, this report cites a Taiwanese source (written in Chinese), claiming:
I don't know what exactly goes into those figures, but this overview of the supply chain for semiconductors suggests that most of the raw silicon comes from not-Taiwan which is then also refined in not-Taiwan before it makes its way to TSMC-and-co.
I know that that's not Taiwan-specific data but I wasn't able to find any source saying that Taiwan had a lot of high quality raw silicon to work with.
Looking at the supply chain for this is actually pretty interesting - I had no idea Germany was an important source of raw materials for example o_o
That's very cool, and I'm happy to be wrong (or at least partially informed). I also didn't know that Germany was such an important player in silicon, but it just goes to show how important globalization is!
Thanks for this.
Very interesting for a nerd like me.
I thought about posting the second report to !hardware@lemmy.world but it felt like a borderline fit and it's from 2023 so I went "eh" ¯\_(ツ)_/¯