Huawei has completed the second phase of a major optoelectronics chip manufacturing and R&D facility in Wuhan. This project represents Huawei's first semiconductor manufacturing facility in China, aiming to provide a complete, independent supply chain from chip design to packaging and testing.
The facility, covering approximately 210,000 square meters, will focus on applications like smart terminals and optics. This development is part of Huawei's broader efforts to achieve supply chain independence in critical technologies like optoelectronics, which are essential for fiber-optic communications.
The main topics covered are Huawei's new semiconductor manufacturing facility, its role in achieving supply chain independence in optoelectronics, and the project's scale and focus.
Huawei takes a step toward supply chain independence in optoelectronics with new ‘light fab’ in Wuhan
- The second phase of the Huawei optoelectronics fab in Wuhan covers about 210,000 square meters and is part of Huawei’s largest R&D centre in central China
- In June this year Huawei said the first phase of its optoelectronics R&D and manufacturing centre in Cambridge, UK, was approved by the local council
An optoelectronic chip project built for Chinese telecoms champion Huawei Technologies Co. was completed this week, providing the company with semiconductor supply chain capabilities from chip design and manufacturing to packaging and testing, according to a website post from the company that built the facility.
The original post from China Construction Eighth Engineering Division Corp, published on Wednesday but since removed, said the second phase of the Huawei “light” fab project, located in Wuhan’s Optics Valley new technology development zone, covers an area of about 210,000 square metres and is part of Huawei’s largest research and development centre in central China.
The CCEEDC post said the facility would focus on applications such as “smart terminals and optics”.
“The finished project will be Huawei’s first semiconductor manufacturing facility in China, helping Huawei build a smart world where everything is connected and achieving a complete supply chain from semiconductor design, manufacturing, to packaging and testing – and it’s also consumer-facing,” said the website post.
Calls from the South China Morning Post to CCEEDC seeking clarification on why the post was removed went unanswered.
Optoelectronics devices, including lasers and light emitting diodes (LEDs), are a key technology used in fibre optic communication systems.