Applied Materials opens factory in Singapore with one thousand AI jobs

Published on June 10, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The demand for artificial intelligence chips continues to drive the expansion of the industry. Applied Materials has opened a new plant in Singapore, which will generate 1,000 jobs in manufacturing, research, and services. The facility aims to strengthen the global semiconductor supply chain.

Semiconductor factory interior, robotic arms placing silicon wafers into advanced chip fabrication machines, blue LED indicators blinking, engineers in cleanroom suits monitoring holographic AI data displays showing real-time production metrics, automated guided vehicles transporting wafer cassettes, cinematic engineering visualization, cold blue and white industrial lighting, sterile metallic environment, photorealistic technical render, ultra-detailed machinery with layered circuit patterns visible through glass panels

Chip manufacturing advances with new technical capabilities 🏭

Applied Materials' new plant in Singapore focuses on precision deposition and etching processes, essential for advanced semiconductor nodes. These technologies enable the creation of smaller, more efficient transistors needed for AI accelerators. The facility will also house an R&D center to collaborate with clients on process optimization. Singapore is consolidating itself as a key hub in the regional supply chain.

AI gets the credit, but humans put the pieces together 🤖

While artificial intelligence grabs all the headlines, someone has to assemble the machines that make the chips. Applied Materials is hiring 1,000 people to literally tighten screws and calibrate sensors. So, every time an AI generates a poem or a drawing, remember there's a technician in Singapore wondering if the coffee in the machine is still free.