Foxconn in Taiwan Announces Plans to Construct the Biggest Nvidia Superchip Plant Worldwide
Foxconn announced that it is working with Nvidia to construct Taiwan’s largest and fastest ‘supercomputer.’
Foxconn, a Taiwan-based electronics manufacturer, is in the process of building the world’s largest production facility for Nvidia’s GB200 “superchips,” which are utilized in AI servers, as disclosed by the company on Tuesday.
Benjamin Ting, Foxconn’s senior vice president of the cloud enterprise solutions business group, stated that the company is constructing a sizeable production plant to address the increasing demand for the Blackwell platform.
Speaking at the company’s annual tech day in Taipei on Oct. 8, Ting mentioned, “We’re building the largest GB200 production facility on the planet. The demand is awfully huge.”
During the event, Foxconn Chairman Young Liu informed reporters that the new facility is situated in Mexico, but did not provide specific details regarding its completion timeline.
Foxconn’s intention is to leverage the new supercomputer to propel advancements in Taiwan’s cancer research, language model development, and smart city innovations.
“Empowered by NVIDIA’s Blackwell platform, Foxconn’s novel AI supercomputer is among the most potent globally, signifying a notable stride in AI computing and efficiency,” stated Foxconn Vice President James Wu, according to the blog post.
The construction of the supercomputer is taking place in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. The initial phase is anticipated to be operational by mid-2025, with full deployment expected by 2026.
These applications include the “digitalization of manufacturing and inspection workflows, development of AI-powered electric vehicle and robotics platforms,” and language-based generative AI services, as per Nvidia.
“A new type of manufacturing has emerged—the production of intelligence. And the data centers that produce it are AI factories,” remarked Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang at that time.
Foxconn, recognized as Apple’s primary iPhone assembler, has allocated over $500 million in the Mexican state of Chihuahua.
Reuters contributed to this report.