It was an unlikely spot to make such a bold statement. Standing in front of a mound of dirt in the middle of a barren field surrounded by rice paddies, Elpida Memory’s chief executive officer vowed on Friday to unseat Samsung Electronics from the top of the global DRAM industry.Elpida and Powerchip Semiconductor, the largest memory chip makers in Japan and Taiwan, respectively, will work together to take the top spot in the global DRAM market, Elpida CEO Yukio Sakamoto said.“Elpida and Powerchip will be number one in market share in two or three years,” he said, adding that the companies together aim to control one-third of global DRAM output by that time. Elpida has been working with Powerchip for the past few years, trading technology for a portion of the Taiwanese company’s output. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe Taiwanese DRAM makers often turn to overseas partners for technology, such as Nanya Technology’s work with Germany’s Infineon Technologies AG. Taiwanese investment incentives encourage companies to build expensive chip factories on the island, keeping chip production costs among the lowest in the world. Combined with technology developed overseas, it makes a powerful competitor. Sakamoto made the comments in front of a pile of dirt set up for the groundbreaking of Powerchip’s latest factories in central Taiwan, in an industrial park so new that it’s mostly still fields surrounded by local farms. Within the next few years, the Central Taiwan Science Park will likely host the largest concentration of advanced 12-inch chip plants in the world, thanks to investments by the island’s chip makers. Powerchip announced plans Friday to spend NT$300 billion (US$9.2 billion) on four huge new factories in the park. The groundbreaking was for two of the new factories, dubbed 12-inch due to the size of the silicon wafers used in the chip-making process. The plants are replacing older 8-inch factories because they reduce production costs by as much as a third. The new plants will produce chips on up to 70,000 wafers per month by the time they’re in full production, which will likely take a few years. Powerchip already operates two 12-inch plants in Taiwan and is moving equipment into a third around the middle of this year, dubbed 12M. It expects production at 12M to reach 10,000 wafers per month by the end of this year. Thousands of DRAM chips can be made on a single silicon wafer.The new factories in the science park will create up to 6,000 new work opportunities when they’re completed, said Frank Huang, chairman of Powerchip, during a speech at the ceremony.The company’s other technology partner, Japan’s Renesas Technology, also sent a high-ranking executive to attend the ceremony. The two chip makers work on flash memory together.-Dan Nystedt, IDG News ServiceCheck out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content feature Mastercard preps for the post-quantum cybersecurity threat A cryptographically relevant quantum computer will put everyday online transactions at risk. Mastercard is preparing for such an eventuality — today. By Poornima Apte Sep 22, 2023 6 mins CIO 100 CIO 100 CIO 100 feature 9 famous analytics and AI disasters Insights from data and machine learning algorithms can be invaluable, but mistakes can cost you reputation, revenue, or even lives. These high-profile analytics and AI blunders illustrate what can go wrong. By Thor Olavsrud Sep 22, 2023 13 mins Technology Industry Technology Industry Technology Industry feature Top 15 data management platforms available today Data management platforms (DMPs) help organizations collect and manage data from a wide array of sources — and are becoming increasingly important for customer-centric sales and marketing campaigns. By Peter Wayner Sep 22, 2023 10 mins Marketing Software Data Management opinion Four questions for a casino InfoSec director By Beth Kormanik Sep 21, 2023 3 mins Media and Entertainment Industry Events Security Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe