Electronics assembly company Foxconn, which is known for building iPhones for Apple, announced that it has just received regulatory approval to expand its Wisconsin factory. According to Reuters, the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation (WEDC) has just approved the company’s additional $549 million investment to expand its operations in Racine County. This will help the manufacturer build more AI servers for its clients, especially as demand is steadily increasing.
“As the demand for more data infrastructure continues to rise, Foxconn will keep responding to our customers’ needs with flexibility and at scale in the United States,” Foxconn chief product officer Jerry Hsiao told Reuters. The move will not only increase the company’s output, but it will also result in 1,374 new jobs — effectively doubling the workforce in the state, which already accounts for 25% of the company’s workforce in the U.S.
Despite this, memory chip makers like Micron, SK hynix, and Samsung reportedly have no plans to build new fabs to increase production. This is because they’re wary of an AI bubble, which many experts say we are already in, that could pop anytime. Should that happen, they would be left with massive infrastructure and production capacity but with no customers to use them.
Still, this is a hopeful development for the Wisconsin plant, which has seen a number of ups and downs in recent years. Foxconn initially announced in 2017 that it acquired the property to build a $10-billion LCD manufacturing plant — but things seem to have changed in 2018, when the company scaled back its plans even after it had already received $4 billion in subsidies from the state of Wisconsin. Then, in 2019, it said that it had scrapped its plans for the factory, only to turn around shortly after and say that it was back on track.
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