Chip Titan TSMC's First Factory in Japan Has to Contend With Horrible Traffic
Chip Titan TSMC's First Factory in Japan Has to Contend With Horrible Traffic · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- Every morning, some of the world’s top chip engineers can be found stuck in traffic on Kumamoto Prefecture’s Route 30, as vehicles carrying heavy machinery and thousands of workers inch toward what will soon become Japan’s most-advanced chip hub when Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.’s new factory goes online next year.

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Billions of dollars are pouring into Kikuyo in semiconductor-related subsidies, converting fields of cabbages, daikon and carrots into huge factories, lifting land prices and bringing new jobs. But the flood of investment and the influx of workers are also overwhelming the farm town of 43,000, causing chronic gridlock, shortages in housing and services and stretching commute times to the chip industrial park to 90 minutes or more.

“The traffic is so bad,” said resident Miki Ikeda. “And staffing shortages are everywhere. An elementary school built just two years ago doesn’t have enough classrooms; daycares don’t have enough teachers; town hall — which is supposed to make sure everything is running — doesn’t have enough people to deal with the problem.”

And the pace of change is accelerating. Companies around the globe are discovering Kikuyo and Japan’s water-rich countryside as they remake their supply chains in a world increasingly divided by US-China rivalry. As manufacturers seek to lower their technological reliance on Taiwan, an island at the center of geopolitical tensions, Tokyo is jumping at the opportunity.

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s administration is prepared to commit more than $14 billion in subsidies as part of a push to triple domestic production of chips by 2030: Japan’s shouldering almost half the estimated $8 billion cost of the TSMC factory while in talks about support for a second Kumamoto plant; it’s poised to provide about $1.5 billion to help finance an expansion at Micron Technology Inc.’s Hiroshima factory; and it’s funding homegrown Rapidus Corp. to make the country’s own cutting-edge chips. The jammed roads of Kumamoto, the first step in Japan's strategy, risk undermining the country's national silicon ambitions.

Kishida is betting the shifting geopolitical priorities will help aging Japan regain some of its long-lost leadership in semiconductors and remake the southwestern island of Kyushu into a Silicon Island that’ll draw young global talent. But the region’s sudden rise in fortune is bringing to light years of delay in building out roads and public transportation systems — and that’s turning into a potential bottleneck for Japan’s chip aspirations.