Thursday, March 17, 2011
Lithium-ion battery, substrate markets said among hardest hit
Bloomberg

The global supply of lithium-ion batteries, substrates for chips and 
power-supply capacitors may be the technology industries hit the hardest by 
the Tohoku catastrophe, Daiwa Securities Group Inc. said.

Closure of plants at Hitachi Chemical Co., which makes materials used in 
lithium-ion cells, Sanyo Electric Co. and Sony Corp. will affect the supply 
of rechargeable batteries, Pranab Kumar Sarmah, Hong Kong-based analyst at 
Daiwa Securities, said in a report Tuesday.

Japan makes almost 40 percent of the world's electronics and audiovisual 
components, according to Daiwa. Production has been suspended at factories 
in northern Japan. It could take one to three months for output to recover 
fully, the report said.

"We believe the impact on the electronics supply chain will be substantial," 
Sarmah said in the report.

The global semiconductor industry is likely to be affected if Hitachi 
Chemical and Mitsubishi Gas Chemical Co. suspend their factories for more 
than two weeks, the report said. Nippon Chemi-Con Corp.'s halting of 
aluminum-capacitor production may disrupt power-supply manufacturing, it 
said.

Tokyo-based Hitachi Chemical said Tuesday some of its factories are located 
within the evacuation zone of Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s Fukushima No. 1 
nuclear power plant. The company is preparing to resume operations at 
factories located in Ibaraki and Chiba prefectures, though the shortage of 
water and power may cause delays, it said.

Sony has said it's halting operations at eight factories, including those 
making lithium-ion batteries. Panasonic Corp., which controls Sanyo, is 
suspending operations at some of its plants north of Tokyo. 
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nb20110317n3.html


_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to