A $200 million semiconductor chemical manufacturing facility will be built in Casa Grande, creating about 65 jobs.
KPCT Advanced Chemicals will occupy 10 acres and is expected to be operational by 2025, an Arizona Commerce Authority news release said.
The facility will produce chemicals critical to semiconductor manufacturing, expanding Arizonaâs supply chain.
KPCT Advanced Chemicals is a joint venture between Kanto Group, a leading semiconductor chemical supplier based in Taiwan, and Chemtrade Logistics Inc., the leading North American producer of electronic grade sulfuric acid.
The Casa Grande facility will have a total annual capacity of 100,000 metric tons of electronic grade acid, serving the growing North American semiconductor market, the news release said. This facility will be the first greenfield construction of an electronic grade sulfuric acid plant in North America, minimizing emissions.
âWeâre excited to welcome another globally-recognized manufacturing operation to Arizonaâs robust semiconductor supply chain,â said Sandra Watson, president and CEO of the Arizona Commerce Authority. âArizona continues to attract the worldâs leading semiconductor companies.â
The KPCT facility adds to Pinal Countyâs economic momentum. In the last few years, companies including Solvay, Chang Chun Arizona, Kohler, Lucid, Nikola, and Owens Corning have announced or commenced manufacturing operations in Casa Grande, Coolidge and Eloy.
âCasa Grande looks forward to KPCT Advanced Chemicals making the heart of Arizonaâs innovation and technology corridor its home,â said Mayor Craig McFarland. âOur local economy welcomes the potential increase in job and revenue growth.â
Arizona was chosen due to its existing and growing semiconductor manufacturing ecosystem, the news release said. Locating this facility close to its end customers allows improved service and helps reduce the environmental burden of shipping the product long distances.
Mexico and the United States plan to take advantage of the Biden administration's massive investment in semiconductor production to push the integration of their supply chains and cooperate on expanding the production of electric vehicles through Mexico's nationalized lithium industry, officials from both countries said Monday Both efforts seek to eat into Asia's advantage in semiconductors and batteries needed for electric vehicles and promote North American production. They were among the main topics discussed within and on the sidelines of the two countries' High-Level Economic Dialogue in Mexico's capital.



