[News] Intel Reportedly to Brief Staff on TeraFab Involvement in Coming Weeks, While Key Foundry Details Remain Limited
Musk’s TeraFab initiative has sparked broad industry discussion, and Intel’s decision to join the project has further intensified attention. According to CRN, Intel plans to brief employees in the coming weeks on the “scope and nature” of its involvement in the TeraFab chip manufacturing project, based on a memo sent by CEO Lip-Bu Tan last Friday.
As the report indicates, Intel has disclosed few details about its role in TeraFab. In the memo, Tan described the collaboration as a “strategic alliance” between Intel and Musk’s companies, including SpaceX, xAI, and Tesla, noting that Musk’s ambitions across AI, transportation, communications, robotics, and space travel depend on a reliable supply of chips, making Intel a natural partner. He also reiterated earlier social media remarks that Intel will work closely with these companies to help bring up TeraFab.
Still, the report notes that while Tan told employees Intel “will disclose more broadly the scope and nature of this engagement” in the coming weeks, he did not specify whether the information would be made public.
In addition, Tan said Intel CTO Pushkar Ranade will lead the company’s involvement in TeraFab. The CEO added that he will directly oversee the effort. In the memo, Tan also noted that he has asked Ranade to assemble and engage select technologists across the company to contribute to the project.
Musk announced TeraFab last month, saying it would begin with two advanced chip fabrication plants in Austin, Texas. As Reuters notes, one facility will focus on chips for cars and humanoid robotics, while the other will target chips for AI data centers in space.
Key Unknowns Around Timeline, Cost, and Yield
Despite its ambitious vision, analysts cited in the report note that execution visibility remains limited, as there is no clear timeline for high volume manufacturing, no disclosure on capital intensity or cost per wafer, and no guidance on yield ramp expectations, all of which are critical given the sensitivity of advanced node production.
Meanwhile, the cost of building TeraFab remains substantial. As noted by The Edge Malaysia, analysts estimate that the first phase of construction alone could require up to US$35 billion. Reaching a capacity of 1 terawatt would likely involve constructing as many as 140 foundries comparable in scale to TSMC’s first Arizona fab.
Read more
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(Photo credit: Intel on X)