Hynix Fire: Production Will Resume Shortly

The fire that destroyed parts of the Hynix plant in Wuxi, China started at around 7:50 GMT during chip equipment installation and was extinguished in less than two hours, the company said. The inciden...
Hynix Fire: Production Will Resume Shortly
Written by Lacy Langley
  • The fire that destroyed parts of the Hynix plant in Wuxi, China started at around 7:50 GMT during chip equipment installation and was extinguished in less than two hours, the company said. The incident caused one minor injury, it said, adding that it is still assessing exact damages.

    “Currently, there is no material damage to the fab equipment in the clean room, thus we expect to resume operations in a short time period so that overall production and supply volume would not be materially affected,” company representative Seongae Park said in a statement.
    “In addition, we expect that the majority of damage will be covered through insurance.”

    Park said photographs showing towering clouds of black, billowing smoke that circulated among blogs and news websites made the fire appear worse than it actually was.
    “While there are some pictures of the fab surrounded by large dark smoke being circulated, please be informed that the damage is not as severe as it seems,” Park said.
    “The smoke was created because the fire was concentrated in the air purification facilities that are linked to the rooftop of the fab.”

    Hynix said the fire raged for more than an hour. After an initial assessment, the world’s No. 2 maker of dynamic random access memory (DRAM) chips said it found no “material” damage to fabrication gear in its clean room at the plant, which produces around 12 to 15 percent of global computer memory chips.

    With global supplies of DRAM chips already tight, shares in rivals Micron Technology Inc (NSQ:MU – News) and SanDisk Corp (NSQ:SNDK – News) rallied after early reports of the fire. Micron shares were up 4 percent at $14.615 at midday, after surging almost 9 percent at one point. Sandisk was up 2.3 percent at $56.60, after climbing 6 percent at its peak.But the rivals’ shares pared gains after Hynix’s update.

    Hynix, which commanded 30 percent of the memory chip market in the second quarter, said the plant it has suspended produces around 40 percent to 50 percent of its total DRAM output.Any prolonged suspension could tighten the global supply of DRAM chips, widely used in computers and mobile devices. DRAM chip prices nearly doubled in the first six months of this year due to tight supply.

    Image via tweaktown.com

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