Sama Jaya Free Industrial Zone

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Sama Jaya Free Industrial Zone
CountryMalaysia
StateSarawak
CityKuching
Establishment1991
Government
 • TypeSarawak state government
 • BodyMinistry of International Trade and Industry, Industrial Terminal dan Entrepreneur Development (MINTRED)
Area
 • Total813 ha (2,009 acres)
 [2]
Time zoneUTC+8 (MST)
 • Summer (DST)Not observed

Sama Jaya Free Industrial Zone (Sama Jaya FIZ) is a high tech industrial zone located in Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia.

History[]

Sama Jaya FIZ was established and managed by Ministry of Industrial Development Sarawak (MID) in 1991.[3] MID later regroup into Ministry of International Trade and Industry, Industrial Terminal dan Entrepreneur Development (MINTRED) in 2019.[1] Due to availability of cheap land and labour, it attracted investments from United States and Japan. In 1995, Japanese electronics manufacturer, Toko Electronics, became the first company to establish a factory in this zone.[4] This was followed by Japanese electronics company Taiyo Yuden, and American hard disk manufacturer Komag (now subsidiary of Western Digital).[2] In 1996, US printed circuit board manufacturer named Zyco (now known as Sanmina Corporation open their factories there.[4][2]

In 1994, Sarawak Skills Development Centre was set up to provide skilled labour for various industrial zones in Sarawak.[5]

In 1998, the Sarawak state government, Malaysian federal government, and Interconnect Technology started a project on creating the first integrated circuit fab in Borneo named 1st Silicon. However, the deal did not materialise due to a lack of funding and technology partners. However, in 1999, the project was revived with US$200 million cash injection from Commerzbank AG of Germany with Sharp Corporation as the technology partner. An 8-inch, 0.25-micron wafer fabrication facility was built in Sama Jaya and became operational in 2001.[6][7] By 2002, the cost of the fabrication plant swelled to RM 6.5 billion (US$1.7 billion).[8] In 2005, 1st Silicon announced the production of 0.13 micron wafers, first in Malaysia to do so.[9] Despite making losses over the years, Sarawak state government continued to invest in 1st Silicon for the benefit of the future generation.[10] In September 2006, 1st Silicon completed merger with Germany based X-Fab Silicon Foundries, to form X-Fab Sarawak Sdn Bhd where X-Fab holds 58% of the shares and Sarawak government holds 35% minority stake.[11]

In 2009, Western Digital decided to pull out of Sarawak and close its manufacturing plant in Sama Jaya. However, after an intervention from the Sarawak government, Western Digital decided to sell the plant to Hitachi Global Storage Technologies (HGST).[12][13]

In 2010, Malaysian government set up a plan to transform the FIZ into a solar industry hub specialising in downstream processing.[4] United States-based MEMC Electronic Material Corporation (now SunEdison, subsidiary of LONGi), invested RM 710 million to built a solar wafer producing plant in the zone.[14]

In 2012, Sanmina Corporation decided to close its facilities in Sama Jaya and moved its operations to Wuxi, China for cost saving measures.[15] Other causes of this move could be due to expensive transportation costs, inadequate infrastructure support, and lack of employable human capital.[12]

In 2016, OM Group Electronic Chemicals which specialises in chemical products manufacturing,[16][17][18][19] was acquired by Element Solutions and underwent restructuring exercises.[20][21][22]

During Covid-19 pandemic in April 2020, all factories in Sama Jaya were operating at 20 to 30% capacity during Movement Control Order (MCO) period.[23] In June 2021, Taiyo Yuden factory was forced to close down for 14 days due to a high number of Covid-19 infections amongst workers.[24] In September 2021, Tabung Ekonomi Gagasan Anak Sarawak (Sarawak people's Vision Economic Fund) (Tegas) Digital Village (TDV) was opened in the FIZ to promote digital innovation and entrepreneurship in the state.[25][26] In December 2021, Sarawak government announced that Sama Jaya industrial zone was nearing its full operational capacity and proposed plans to build another high-tech park at Kota Samarahan.[27]

Infrastructure and incentives[]

Companies inside the FIZ are exempted from sales and services tax.[28] Besides, companies given pioneer status inside the zone are exempted from import and export tariffs, 35% corporate income tax, and 5% development tax for five to ten years. After expiry of the income tax exemption, the company can also apply for investment tax credit exemption for additional five to ten years. Sarawak state government offers subsidies of water, electricity and also other physical infrastructure support in the zone.[4]

Sama Jaya FIZ is located 12 km from Kuching International Airport, 6 km from Kuching port and 16 km from the city centre. Roads, drainage systems, electricity substations, water supplies, and telephone networks were constructed here.[2] IPVPN, Fibre Optics and ADL/ADSL internet connections are available.[29]

In 2015, X-Fab signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with engineering faculty of Universiti Malaysia Sarawak (UNIMAS) on research and development.[30]

East Coast Freight Forwarders is involved in integrated logistics, international freight forwarding, warehouses, and distribution of manufactured goods in the zone.[31]

Tenants[]

  • Murata Manufacturing. Subsidiary: Toko Electronics - induction coils production[32]
  • Active Point - general trading[33]
  • SE Micro Engineering - precision machined parts, nozzle manufacturing[34]
  • LONGi Green Energy Technology. Subsidiary: SunEdison Kuching (previously MEMC Kuching in 2010)[35] - Whole mono photovoltaic industry chain[36]
  • Western Digital. Subsidiary: Hitachi Global Storage Technologies (HGST) Malaysia - storage device manufacturing[37][18]
  • Taiyo Yuden - inductors, common mode choke coils, ring varistors, balun transformers, wireless modules, aluminum electrolytic capacitors, and solar power generation products[38][39]
  • Kwong Seng Cheong Food Industries - supply halal food for Taiyo Yuden[40][41]
  • X-Fab - wafer design, processing, masking, assembly, and testing[42]
  • Iljin Group - Elecfoil manufacturing[43][44]
  • Tenaga Kenari - Bare Printed Circuit Board manufacturing[45]
  • Elite Industries - jigs, fixtures, dies, molds and other custom-made parts[46]
  • Hai Shoon Group. Subsidiary: Samyoung Global Construction Malaysia - concrete supplier[47][48]
  • Shoei Chemical Inc. Subsidiary: SEM Malaysia - Basic inorganic chemical manufacturing[49][50]
  • Linde plc Malaysia - industrial nitrogen gas supply for Taiyo Yuden and LONGi[51]

Economy[]

The total exports from Sama Jaya FIZ were valued at RM 2.7 billion in 2016, and increased to RM 3.2 billion in 2017.[52] The figure reached RM 4.6 billion in 2018.[53] In 2019, total export value from the park exceeded RM 5.43 billion, followed by RM 6.93 billion in 2020.[54] As of 2019, cumulative investments by multinational companies exceeded RM 12 billion, created 118,000 jobs where 99% of the jobs were filled up by Sarawakians.[53]

References[]

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  2. ^ a b c d "SAMA JAYA : Sarawak's High-Technology Success Story". NetInc. Archived from the original on 11 September 2019. Retrieved 30 September 2021.
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  4. ^ a b c d Wulandari, Sri. Malaysia's Free Industrial Zones: Reconfiguration of the electronics production space (PDF). Hong Kong: Asia Monitor Resource Centre. p. 217. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 July 2021. Retrieved 30 September 2021.
  5. ^ "History - Sarawak Skills". Sarawak Skills. Archived from the original on 25 January 2021. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
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  25. ^ Mail, Rintos (1 January 2017). "Construction of Digital Village to begin this month". The Borneo Post. Archived from the original on 10 June 2021. Retrieved 3 October 2021.
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  47. ^ "HAI SHOON CONCRETE SDN BHD". Hai Shoon Concrete. Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
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  51. ^ Wong, Jack (1 November 2021). "New plant to cater for industrial gases demand". The Star (Malaysia). Archived from the original on 12 February 2022. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
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  54. ^ Chua, Sam. "Four firms to invest RM6.31 bln in business expansion at Sama Jaya High Tech Park". The Borneo Post. Archived from the original on 4 October 2021. Retrieved 4 October 2021.

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