Energy News  
Taiwan's Next 'Silicon Valley' Confounds Critics

This undated handout photo released 18 October 2005 by Taichung county government shows a worker outside a plant of ProMos Technologies, a memory chip maker, in Taichung, at the under-construction Central Taiwan Science Park. Amid the rolling hills of central Taiwan, the massive 31 billion USD investment is fast changing a landscape of sugar cane and sweet potato farms into lines of slick towers, and will house the latest in cutting edge technology. AFP photo.

Taichung, Taiwan (AFP) Nov 1, 2005
Amid the rolling hills of central Taiwan, a massive 31 billion dollar investment is fast changing a landscape of sugar cane and sweet potato farms into lines of slick towers, which will house the latest in cutting edge technology.

That technology will allow the Central Taiwan Science Park to deliver to the world's lounge rooms the latest in wide flat panel TVs and super computer screens, some big enough to match a three-seater couch in size.

But it is the speed of development and the rate of companies willing to sign on to the project, on the outskirts of Taichung city, that has impressed its backers and confounded critics.

Lai Ying-hsi, chief of the Taichung government's economic affairs department said sceptics included members of a screening committee established after the Taiwanese cabinet agreed to a feasibility study on the project in January 2001.

"They felt why does Taiwan need another high-tech industrial park while the other ones in the south are only half booked by potential investors due to economic sluggishness," Lai said.

Since the study, 72 companies ready to invest 1.04 trillion Taiwan dollars (31.04 billion US) have won approvals, among them industry leaders including Au Optronics Corp, ProMOS Technologies Inc and US-based Corning.

Lai said it was Taichung's stable electricity and steady water supply which eventually convinced the authorities to proceed. Taichung boasts one of a biggest thermal power plants in Asia while chronic water shortages have dogged science and technology parks elsewhere on the island.

Yang Wen-ke, deputy chief of the park's preparatory committee, said the rapid pace of its development -- in an industry which is consistently tied to tight construction deadlines to deliver next generation products -- was a big factor in winning over more firms.

The first companies began opening their doors within 10 months of the project's drafting.

"The pace of its development is the fastest ever in Taiwan's efforts to build high-tech industrial parks," Yang said. "It changed so fast, you would be amazed by the vast differences registered over every month."

It took Au Optronics just 15 months to complete construction of an 80 billion Taiwan dollar complex to produce 60,000 panels a month which includes the revolutionary 74 by 60 inch television sets.

"Au Optronics Chairman K.T.Lee said 'if Au Optronics had built the plant elsewhere, the construction may not have been as swift'," Lai said, adding that the project was completed 47 days ahead of schedule.

"That is important to a time sensitive industry," Lai said.

US-based Corning followed suit, with a ground breaking in September last year for a glass melting plant that will produce compacted glass substrate to be used in LCD screens.

Then came local memory chip maker ProMOS Technologies, which is designing cutting-edge 90-nanometer technology to produce microchips and 40,000 12-inch wafers a month in two projects which cost 85 billion Taiwan dollars to build.

While Optoelectronics will account for 34 percent of the park's ongoing investment projects, the balance will be filled by precision machinery, biotechnology, semiconductor, computer peripherals and telecommunication projects.

"The demand for land is much stronger than our previous estimates," said Yang from the park's preparatory committee.

Thus authorities plan to expand the size of the park to 1,200 hectares (2,964 acres) after 94 percent of the current 413 hectares of land was booked.

Yang said he was confident the new industrial park would eventually outperform the Hsinchu Science Industrial Park in the north, which has been hailed as the island's answer to Silicon Valley in the United States.

The Hsinchu science park houses 384 high-tech companies focussing on semiconductors, telecommunications, and computer related industries. It churned out products worth 32.41 billion US dollars in 2004.

But the LCD and microchip industry is renowned for its huge consumption of water and investors at Hsinchu have been annoyed by past occasional water shortages.

"The new industrial park is fast coming from behind," Yang said proudly of the Taichung project. Meanwhile Lai touched a raw nerve in regards to competing parks elsewhere, when he asked rhetorically: "Have you ever heard of central Taiwan being gripped by a water shortage?"

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express
China News from SinoDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Taiwan Has Produced Three Prototypes Of Cruise Missile: Jane's
Taipei (AFP) Jan 08, 2006
Taiwan has produced three prototypes of a new cruise missile which could be used to strike the east coast of rival China, an authoritative defence magazine said.







  • Russian, Chinese Firms Battle For Oil In Kazakhstan
  • Oil Firms Under Pressure From Consumers
  • Harnessing The Sun: NASA Studies Advanced Solar Cells On Station
  • Analysis: Transition From Oil To Take Time

  • Innovative 'Recycling' Project Could Reduce US Inventory Of Spent Nuclear Fuel
  • Duke Power May Build Nuclear Power Plants
  • US Congress Wants Landmark Nuclear Deal With India To Be Transparent
  • Feds Unveil Yucca Mountain Cleanup Plans

  • Getting To The TOPP Of Houston's Air Pollution
  • Scientists Seek Sprite Light Source



  • Farm Talks Collapse In Geneva
  • Defeating The 'Superpests'
  • Gourmet Space Dinner On Greenland Icecap
  • Crop Scientists Improve "Supergrain" For Impoverished Farmers

  • GM Hires Russian Nuclear Scientists To Develop New Auto Technology
  • Japan Creates The World's Fastest Electric Sedan
  • Motorists To Pay 'Congestion' Charge Over Broader Swath Of London
  • Solar Cars Driving Towards A Hydrogen Future

  • Manufacturing Academy - Big Boost for Aerospace
  • Italian Defense Minister High On Eurofighter
  • New Processor Makes Strike Eagle More Lethal
  • Pentagon Announces Possible Pilot Training Contract With Taiwan

  • NASA plans to send new robot to Jupiter
  • Los Alamos Hopes To Lead New Era Of Nuclear Space Tranportion With Jovian Mission
  • Boeing Selects Leader for Nuclear Space Systems Program
  • Boeing-Led Team to Study Nuclear-Powered Space Systems

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement