TSMC, Samsung and Intel have a huge carbon footprint – CNBC

A man walks past TSMC’s logo at the company’s headquarters in Hsinchu, Taiwan.

Sam Yeh | AFP | Getty Images

Computer chips may be in short supply, but the semiconductor industry’s carbon emissions are plentiful.

The little pieces of silicon are vital in today’s technology-driven economies, but their impact on the planet isn’t always positive.

Vast amounts of energy are required to manufacture the chips that lie beneath the hood of a whole manner of items — from fighter jets and cars, to kettles and doorbells.

A team of researchers at Harvard University wrote in 2020 that chip manufacturing “accounts for most of the carbon output” from electronic devices.

While some of this energy comes from renewable sources, much of it comes from fossil fuels like coal and gas, and some chipmakers now emit more carbon than well-known carmakers.

Energy intensive processes

Several aspects of the semiconductor production process require vast amounts of power, according to Forrester analyst Glenn O’Donnell.

To begin with, the chipmakers need to take raw silicon (i.e. sand), melt it down, purify it, and then “grow” the silicon “rods,” O’Donnell told CNBC. “The furnaces [needed] to do this are extremely energy hungry,” he said.

The rods of purified silicon are then “sliced like deli meat into thin wafers,” upon which chips are built, O’Donnell added.

Various materials are layered onto the wafers in a series of steps that use energy intensive equipment. Diffusion furnaces, ion implanters, and plasma etching-machines all need considerable amounts of power, O’Donnell said, adding that some require very high temperatures.

The diffusion furnaces, for example, run at 1,200 to 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit and the wafers sit in them for hours at a time to change the surface characteristics of the silicon.

Taiwan’s chip behemoth

Most of the world’s chips are made in Asia, with Taiwan being a particular hotbed of activity thanks to the presence of the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, which produces more chips than any other company worldwide.

Yung-Jen Chen, a Greenpeace researcher in Taiwan who leads the charity’s climate corporate team, told CNBC that the company emits more carbon than any other chipmaker. It’s “way ahead [of] others,” she said.

The Hsinchu-headquartered firm, which makes chips for the likes of Apple and Tesla, uses more electricity each year than Taiwan’s capital Taipei, according to Greenpeace.

As a result of its power consumption, TSMC emitted 6 million tons of carbon in 2017, 8 million tons in 2019, and 15 million in 2020. In the last couple of years, TSMC’s greenhouse gas emissions have overtaken those of automotive giant GM, according to data from Bloomberg.

Gartner analyst Alan Priestley said it’s important to compare the semiconductor industry’s emissions to emissions for other industries such as logistics, aviation and shipping.

TSMC’s emissions, which are shared in its annual sustainability reports, are “still increasing rapidly due to constant expansion,” Chen said.

Indeed, TSMC is in the process of setting up huge new factories in Taiwan and Arizona. While these multibillion-dollar facilities will increase the supply of chips, they will also increase the amount of electricity that TSMC uses.

Shift to renewables

“In order to reduce carbon emissions, switching the electricity sources to clean energy is the key,” Chen said, adding that chipmakers are “eager” to do this as soon as possible.

After TSMC, Samsung and …….

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/03/tsmc-samsung-and-intel-have-a-huge-carbon-footprint.html

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *