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Home.forex news reportSouth Korean chip industry worried Iran crisis to disrupt raw material supply,...

South Korean chip industry worried Iran crisis to disrupt raw material supply, boost chip prices

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By Heejin Kim and Hyunjoo Jin

SEOUL, March 5 (Reuters) – South Korea’s chip industry is concerned that a prolonged Iranian crisis will disrupt supplies of key ‌materials from the Middle East and increase chip prices as a result ‌of a spike in energy costs, a ruling party lawmaker said on Thursday.

The chip industry also said the ​crisis could deal a setback to plans by big tech firms to build AI data centres in the Middle East for the longer term, thus weighing on strong chip demand, Kim Young-bae said.

Kim made the comment after meeting with executives from companies such as Samsung ‌Electronics, the world’s top memory ⁠chipmaker, and business and trade groups.

“We say the semiconductor supercycle has arrived, but data centre plans are highly likely to be disrupted, potentially creating ⁠problems with chip demand,” he said at a briefing with reporters.

“Officials raised a possibility that semiconductor production could be disrupted if some of these key materials cannot be sourced from ​the Middle ​East,” he said.

The chip industry is worried that ​the Iran crisis could disrupt supplies ‌of some key chip-making materials like helium from the Middle East, Kim said.

Helium is essential for heat management during semiconductor production and it has no viable alternatives currently.

Samsung Electronics declined to comment on the matter.

DATA CENTRES

South Korean companies Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix have enjoyed surging prices of memory chips, thanks to the global race by tech ‌firms to build AI data centres.

Amazon said on Monday ​some of its data centres in the United ​Arab Emirates and Bahrain were damaged ​by drone strikes in the Middle East conflict, sparking questions around ‌Big Tech’s pace of expansion in the ​region.

U.S. tech giants like ​Microsoft and Nvidia have been positioning the UAE as a regional hub for artificial intelligence computing needed to power services such as ChatGPT.

Iran fired a barrage ​of drones and missiles at ‌Gulf States in retaliation for U.S. and Israeli strikes that killed Supreme Leader ​Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Saturday.

(Reporting by Heejin Kim, Hyunjoo Jin and Joyce ​LeeEditing by Ed Davies and Christian Schmollinger)



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