Analog Devices put out €630 million for new facility in Ireland

Spread the love

Limerick, Ireland: Analog Devices Inc., a global semiconductor company has announced a new €630 million investment at its European regional headquarters in the Raheen Business Park in Limerick, Ireland. The investment will enable the construction of a new, state-of-the-art, 45,000 sq ft research and development and manufacturing facility.
 
The new facility will support ADI’s development of next-generation signal processing innovations designed to accelerate the digital transformation of Industrial, Automotive, Healthcare, and other sectors. It is expected to triple ADI’s European wafer production capacity and aligns with the company’s goal of doubling its internal manufacturing capacity to enhance the resiliency of its global supply chain and better serve customer needs.

This investment is expected to grow ADI’s employment footprint in the mid-west region of Ireland by 600 new positions, a significant increase to ADI’s current 1,500 employees in Ireland and 3,100 employees in Europe as a whole.

Today’s announcement comes a year after ADI announced a separate investment of €100 million in ADI Catalyst, its 100,000 sq-ft custom-built facilities for innovation and collaboration at its Limerick campus. Ireland is also home to ADI’s main European Research and Development Center, which has generated more than 1,000 patents since its inception and has seeded ADI R&D sites throughout Europe in Spain, Italy, UK, Romania, and Germany.
 
“Since 1976, Ireland has been a critical innovation center for ADI, thanks to its strong academic and research organisations, business ecosystem, and progressive government leadership,” said Analog Devices Inc CEO and Chair Vincent Roche.

“This next-generation semiconductor manufacturing facility and expanded R&D team will further extend ADI Limerick’s global influence. Through organic R&D and close collaboration with our customers and ecosystem partners, we are striving to solve some of the world’s greatest challenges and enable a more efficient, safer, and sustainable future,” added Roche.
 
The new investment is planned as part of a collaboration within the European Union‘s Important Projects of Common European Interest on Microelectronics and Communication Technologies (IPCEI ME/CT) initiative and will support cross-border collaborative research.

ADI’s IPCEI application – Ireland’s first since the inception of the Important Projects of Common European Interest (IPCEI) initiative – is subject to final approval from the European Commission and is supported by the Irish Government through IDA Ireland.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *