Intel prepares to close Philippine plant

By Melvin G. Calimag , ZDNet Asia
Monday, April 07, 2008 02:48 PM

PHILIPPINES--Intel is expected to shut its test and assembly plant in the country within the year, in a move that has stunned its employees and the local industry.

Top company officials informed local employees during a meeting Apr. 2 that the company was exploring "multiple options" for the manufacturing hub, one of which included plans to close the facility. They added that severance pay packages have already been arranged for the employees, should these plans fail to work out in the next six to nine months.

First set up in Makati City in 1974, the manufacturing plant was later moved to a bigger facility in General Trias, an industrial town where the biggest industry is semiconductor, in the province of Cavite, located just south of Manila.

In 2002, six years after the move, the Makati location was closed and Intel consolidated all its manufacturing functions including Flash memory design, to the Cavite facility, which currently employs about 3,000 employees.

The mills have been spinning

Rumors have been circulating since 2005 that Intel had already made a decision to pack up and leave the Philippines after the year 2010. The writing on the wall became clearer in 2006 when Intel inaugurated a US$605 million test and assembly plant in Ho Chin Minh City in Vietnam.
During the Vietnam launch, Intel Chairman Craig Barrett said the facility was simply an expansion and would not affect the operations of other plants located in countries such as the Philippines.
However, the telltale signs were obvious. Among the countries in Asia where it has test and assembly plants, the Philippines was the only site in which Intel made no significant plans to invest or expand.
Compared to the Cavite plant which received no part of Intel's US$1 billion investment plan for Asia in 2006, Intel poured a whopping US$270 million to increase the capacity of its Malaysian plants and another US$300 million to expand its facilities in Shanghai and Chengdu in China.
During the media interview, Barrett said the company considers "political stability" as a major factor when making investment decisions and singled out Vietnam as a favorable investment climate.

Intel was the first American semiconductor company to set up shop in the Philippines in 1974, and to date, the company has poured some US$1.5 billion worth on investment in the country. Intel chose the Philippines as the base of its second Asian offshore assembly operations center, after Malaysia.

According to Intel's local Web site, the Cavite assembly and testing facility provides "integrated circuits known as Flash memory, as well as microprocessors and chipsets that are marketed worldwide".

Impending move stuns employees
According to blog entries posted by current and former Intel employees here, staff present at the Apr. 2 meeting left in tears.

A brief statement from the company stated: "In an effort to keep employees informed, Intel has updated its employees that significant investments would be required to ensure the long-term viability of its factory building in Cavite." It did not explicitly disclose plans to shut down the manufacturing site.

However, an Intel representative said in a phone interview that offering exit package was the right thing to do since closing the plant is one of the options the company is exploring.

"We can't blame the employees if they feel [the offer of severance packages meant] that they're about to lose their jobs," said Teresa Pacis, external communications manager of Intel Technology Philippines, the manufacturing arm of Intel's local subsidiary.

"The company was just being honest with the workers when it announced the compensation package as Intel explores its options," Pacis told ZDNet Asia.

According to various blogs, Intel had discussed the possibility of moving the factory to an IT park in the neighboring province of Laguna because the current Cavite building is structurally unsound.

But employees dismissed this option, questioning the need to offer staff severance packages if the company had intended only to transfer to another location within the country.

Industry observers have cited high electricity and labor costs as two major reasons why Intel is planning an exit strategy. The Philippines has the second most expensive energy cost in Asia after Japan.

Intel's impending pullout is a huge blow to the Philippines, where the electronics market--which encompasses semiconductors--is the country's largest export earner.

The chipmaker's decision to put up a manufacturing hub was a symbolic vote of confidence that paved the way for other foreign companies such as Texas Instruments, to locate their operations in the country.

In fact, the current Cavite plant was where Intel's mobile processor Centrino was first assembled and shipped to the global market. Pentium 4 chips were also manufactured in the facility.

Aside from making chipsets and processors, the local site also houses a Flash memory design factory. However, employees who specialize in Flash are expected to move to Numonyx, a joint venture set up between Intel and STMicroelectronics.

In 2004, an Intel-commissioned study by University of Asia and the Pacific showed that the chipmaker's investments resulted in US$713 million in direct and indirect export contributions.

The report further noted that Intel accounted for 22 percent of exports in Cavite and was the largest employer in General Trias.

Melvin G. Calimag is a freelance IT writer based in the Philippines.


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Talkback 12 comments

Plagiarist!
shame on this person. this story was copied from several news websites and blogs in the philippines. what is this guy doing as a freelance writer for your website?
Posted by Anthony on Tuesday, April 08 2008 12:22 PM

Really?
Anthony,
I'm the person who wrote this story. I'm an IT reporter based in the Philippines and I did attribute the comments I got from the blogs. I got the other details through my own contacts and previous stories on Intel. It was inappropriate for you to make that comment without verifying first your facts.
Posted by Melvin Calimag on Tuesday, April 08 2008 01:57 PM

pseudo-plagiarist?
wow, that was a fiery comment from mr anthony. however, i do have to point out that mr calimag's story came out day after several blogs have talked about it and a story from the inquirer in the philippines came out. it is most likely you took lead in these stories then followed it up. while it is not an entirely unethical process, it would be unwise to take credit for someone else's work, even if you did a few leg work of your own.

at any rate, the intel workers will surely have a sad year. intel is a major manufacturing plant in the philippines and if they leave, could spell the doom for others. i do hope they reconsider.
Posted by anonymous on Tuesday, April 08 2008 03:09 PM

Beg to disagree
I'm not taking credit for somebody else's work. There was indeed an earlier report by inquirer.net, but also in businessworld, just in case you didn't see it. It was even reported by Yahoo News. But we, too, had a tip from a source inside Intel. My editor knew about it. The businessworld report didn't say there was an earlier report apparently because they have their own sources as well.
Journalists each have our own sources, and that's the way it works in our line of work. Although the earlier reports have their own merits, the report that came out here expanded the scope and clarified the issues.
Posted by Melvin Calimag on Tuesday, April 08 2008 04:37 PM

reporter or columnist?
I can't help but notice that melvin Calimag is both a reporter AND a columnist for ZDNet. I'm not familiar with the media business in the philippines but isn't it somewhat unethical that a reporter should also serve as a columnist? First of all, a reporter has to be objective with the topics he or she covers while a columnist interprets these stories and adds a zest of subjective ideals. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see that this kind of setup is somewhat questionable. ZDNet should look into its policies regarding freelance reporters and freelance columnists if it wants to remain a bastion of online truth and integrity. Reporters must be reporters while columnists should be, well, columnists.
Posted by Media Idiot on Wednesday, April 09 2008 01:54 AM

Why reporters are also sometimes columnists
Dear "Media Idiot",

Thanks for your comment. It has always been, and still is, a common practice for reporters to also pen columns and opinion pieces. CNN's Christiane Amanpor, International Herald Tribune's Roger Cohen, the New York Times' Thomas Friedman and Toronto Star's India-born Haroon Siddiqui, were all journalists who also wrote commentaries at some point in their career. And most still do.

Because of their close proximity to news sources and strong domain knowledge of the areas they cover, reporters are in a good position to write columns and express opinions that are based on a deep understanding of the issues at hand. These days, of course, opinion pieces can also come in the form of blogs.

You are right on one point: news articles must remain objective and impartial, while columns/blogs can carry personal opinions. At ZDNet Asia, commentaries/blogs/opinion pieces are always clearly demarcated as such, so our readers know to treat them differently from news articles.

Most importantly, we do not condone plagiarism. We take such allegations seriously and will not hesitate to take necessary actions to deal with such offences. However, while we strongly encourage readers to exchange feedback and provide personal insights on the issues discussed in our articles, we will not condone any personal attacks against our journalists and do not encourage feedback that adds no real value to the discussion.
Posted by Eileen Yu, Senior Editor, ZDNet Asia on Wednesday, April 09 2008 10:48 AM

just an opinion, not an insult
Sorry, you got the wrong impression. I'm not Mr. Anthony. Neither am I a journalist, a columnist or a blogger. I'm a simple reader who happens to pass by and notice that there's something different so I beg your pardon but let me dispense of my own opinions.

First of all, Ms Yu, correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't it that all of the journalists you mentioned became reporters first before they became columnists or started writing opinion pieces? True that they were on the field covering some of the best stories but none of them editorialized during their time as reporters. It was only when they rose up the ranks when they became opinion writers because they have the experience none could match. I may be wrong so pardon my ignorance.

Second, as I reiterate I'm not a journalist, thus I'm not familiar with the media system. However, I've stated earlier that there could be questions with the certainty of material that a reporter/blogger/columnist delivers. A reporter is one who tells the public what is happening and lets them decide while a columnist analyzes the story and gives his or her opinion. And again, isn't it true that a media company is not beholden to the material written by a columnist while the reporter is subject to editorial regulation? Again, pardon my ignorance.

Third, I don't think there's nothing wrong with getting lead stories from any publication. I mean I know CNN often gets the story first and everyone else follow but it doesn't mean that a journalist should continuously follow others. He or she may have to take lead at some point and avoid the pitfalls of just being second-rate. Citing the same names you mentioned (Amanpour, Cohen, Friedman) they had taken the long road to get the best stories until they got to where they are now. In a matter of speaking, will you or any publication allow reporters, freelance or not, to remain second-rate? It's a matter of making them the best in what they are.

Fourth, and the least, I'm not attacking your company nor any of your employees (unlike Mr Anthony and this Ben Over who is attacking me). My first message stemmed from my own observation as well as my limited knowledge of the hallowed media institution.

Fifth, can anyone tell me what in the world is "Hao Siao"? Mr Ben Over, mind you explaining it to me? At least I get to learn something good today, ey?
Posted by Media "Not Mr Anthony" Idiot on Wednesday, April 09 2008 02:40 PM

Correction
I take exception about your insinuation about being "second-rate". It was ZDNetasia which first reported the story how the Philippines voted on the Open XML document format. That was a scoop. Enough said.
Posted by Melvin Calimag on Wednesday, April 09 2008 03:21 PM

Umm, no...
Sorry, I wasn't implying you're the second-rate, Mr. Calimag. I was responding to Ben Over's "following-up-on-a-lead" message.

If I may use my daughter's retort: "That's not for you, duh."

Just read your OXML story. Good one though.

Ben Over, I'm still waiting for your definition of "Hao Siao." I'm pretty curious about it.
Posted by Media Idiot on Wednesday, April 09 2008 04:19 PM

Hao Siao
That goes to show that Media "Mr. Anthony" Idiot is NOT a true journalist; only reason why he can't comprehend the profession. There's nothing wrong following up on a lead. Good stories can't stop with one article. Even the news wires copy leads; they just have to be resourceful enough to get another angle and what not. And that's journalism. Copying press releases, posting on his own blog site as if he wrote the story without attribution to anyone is Media "Mr. Anthony" Idiot's job.
Posted by Ben Over on Wednesday, April 09 2008 01:25 PM

Hey Mr. Anthony
It takes one to know one. I just hope the other Asian IT news website would realize that as well. God bless.
Posted by JesusMaryJoseph on Tuesday, April 08 2008 11:23 PM

Mandatory Implementation Of Alternative Fuel Shol Start Now
May 12,2008
6:30p.m.
Opinion/Commentary
Mandatory Implementation Of Alternative Fuel Should Start Now
By Quirico M. Gorpido, Jr
The unabated rising prices of crude oil and other petroleum products in the international market is now unbearable to the millions of Filipinos, rich and poor. Its influential power of creating a chain reaction of prices in all prime commodities and manufactured goods in the market and stores are irresistible to businessmen who do not want to be left behind by their counterparts in business and escalate as well the prices of all their products. With the spiraling increase in prices of all kinds of consumable goods, the poor and the rich alike are feeling the bitterness of coping with their daily needs. Those who have very low income Filipinos have forced themselves to refrain from buying other household needs, which decades ago were also affordable to them. They reduced their consumption of some goods so that they can still buy something they need for the next two or three days. That's why the entire Filipinos are suffering because of our overdependence on gasoline and crude oil. The Philippine government is spending millions and millions of pesos yearly on gasoline and other oil products for vehicles and factories.
Because of our current hardships and economic miseries our government must not remain callous and insensitive to act. Members of both the Lower an d the Upper House must muster their political will to hasten the approval of a House Bill aim at making mandatory for all operators and drivers nationwide to use the Compressed Natural Gas(CNG)to run the vehicles and factories. The aforesaid HB was co-authored by House energy committee chairman Mikey Arroyo of Pampanga and Parañaque City Representative Eduardo Zialcita. With the immediate implementation of this economic measure, our country can do away with being overdependence on imported fossil fuels, which greatly contribute to the heavy pollution in our big cities and the environment. When this goal would be realized, the Philippines can have a huge reduction on fuel expenditures and its unabated heavy pollution in big metropolis where all types of utilities and factories abound would be greatly reduced.
Since we have no vehicles and cars suitable for the utilization of Compressed Natural Gas, big financing institutions should come to rescue and help the government to buy the needed vehicles in places like the USA,Canada,India,China and in other countries where vehicles design for compressed natural gas fuel are being manufactured. The Malampaya-Palawan oil and gas fields in the country must be mined now and tap other potential oil and gas fields in various places of our nation to sustain our fuel needs. On the other hand, our big capitalists who choose to be consignees in this kind of business should not be tempted in the near future to mix compressed natural gas with crude oil like we have in all gasoline stations throughout the country, called kerosene by other name.
The mixture of two elements, we've just mentioned, like we are buying at gas station, especially if there is a blackout, will surely result to additional pollution in all our areas. The additional pollution due to crude oil mixture with the natural gas is very evident by the soots gathered inside our noses the night before when we resort to kerosene use as temporary substitute for the absence of electric power. Have you not observe that in your home, especially in the households of poor Filipinos? In contrast, unadulterated natural gas, if there's a detection of any soot, is so insignificantly negligible to consider as pollution. Some of emission of kerosene (a mixture of natural gas and crude oil) put inside the lamps would also pollute our rooms the following day, if you have observed that as well. This means that if in the near future some tricky and hoarding businessmen would be tempted to do this deplorable thing, the pollution in our environment would re-emerged. Hence, there's an urgent necessity to screen the attitude of businessmen/capitalists who would like to participate in the Government's venture in this kind of undertaking where the issue on environment-friendly fuel is at stake.
Considering this probable prediction of the money-oriented rather than service-oriented attitude of some businessmen to rake huge profit in the name of mixture elements, the House Bill must include as one of its provisions prohibiting any capitalist/consignee to mix CNG with crude oil. A monitoring task force must be created that would include as members the Energy Committee Chairman, energy official and some honest and prudent NGO environmentalists for the purpose of monitoring and regular checking of CNG's natural content before dispensing the fuel for private and public use. Those businessmen who would violate the law must be slapped with huge fine and imprisonment. We seriously need honest and prudent investors/capitalists in the strict application of such law in order to achieve our goal to greatly reduced our environmental pollution which make adults and children in this country suffer from illness and eventual death to countless of lives. According to reports pollution also causes chronic coughing in millions of children across the globe.
Other alternative fuel or energy that has been tapped to provide electricity and run vehicles is the solar energy. It has already been experimented and found to be feasibly usable and suitably applicable in running vehicles and providing electricity in numerous households in the country. It's a free source of limitless energy and is non-polllutant: one of the greatest gifts from Mother Nature that remain untapped for centuries by man. The emergence of Great Minds in the field of Science and Technology are responsible for a huge leap in inventions and discoveries that have provided man his amenities including some of his needs in life more obtainable than before. We can also use electricity to run jeepneys and buses, which is also pollution-free. Makati's current use of electric jeepneys plying in various areas of the city, which is much lesser in fuel expenses for the drivers and operators compared to gasoline and crude oil, is very encouraging and worthy of emulation for other cities and provinces. The experiments that our scientists, technical men and the experts have been doing are enough proof that the Philippine Government has the capability and the capacity to relentlessly pursue on these projects. A huge budget proportionate enough for its continual implementation must be made now for its effective realization.
The two alternative sources of fuel and energy that we are discussing are sure ways that will eventually release us from our overdependence on gasoline and crude oil which is now very prohibitive to obtain.
Global warming caused by unregulated environmental pollution, which also damaged the ozone layer according to the scientists, is not only a Philippine concern and problem. It is also a concern and a problem of every country, every nation throughout the world, whether the industrialized or the developing because we breathe the same air and we live in the same planet. Therefore, it is of urgent necessity that all the nations and other countries of the world, including the United States of America, China, England, Australia, India, Russia, Japan, European countries, UK and Germany should also shift to alternative fuel like Compressed Natural Gas and solar energy to run their vehicles, cars and factories in order to achieve the highest degree of pollution reduction in our Planet Earth.
To those countries whose climate condition is similar to the Philippines , Nobel Prize winner Dr. Hartmut Michel during his recent visit to Manila has also advised its respective governments to tap wind power and hydro power that are environment-friendly to generate electricity..(Copyright 2008 by Quirico M. Gorpido, Jr.)
Posted by Quirico M. GorpidoJr.6600Maasin City,Southern Leyte,Philippines on Monday, May 12 2008 06:25 PM

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