• arjie an hour ago

    I have a sense of complacency regarding all these. There’s always The One Factory In North Carolina That Produces The Essential Ingredient and it turns out that it’s just the price optimal one and there is enough capacity around the world to substitute.

    Everything from Peak Oil to today has the globalized market/trade machine meeting the needs continuously with only leaf nodes for products being the constraint. Almost all inputs have been commoditized.

  • chasil an hour ago

    Ukraine previously sold half the neon used in semiconductor manufacturing, between Mariupol and Odessa.

    https://www.theregister.com/2022/03/11/ukraine_neon_supplies...

    • chromacity an hour ago

      Ah, this week's iteration of "we're running out of sand". I'm sure one of these predictions will eventually come true, but we have articles that overstate the likelihood and consequences of running out of <some basic material> pretty much every month.

      I'm not keeping track, but some of the things we ran out of include sand, helium, tellurium, tantalum, niobium, bees...

      • csnover 11 minutes ago

        The article isn’t arguing that if ICL facilities are disrupted, that’s it, no more bromine forever. It is saying that if these facilities are disrupted there will be an even bigger problem with DRAM supply than already exists because there is no excess supply, no good alternative, and no quick way to ramp up production.

        This dismissive contrarian Pollyanna attitude might serve well to minimise your personal anxiety, but I do not see how what you are saying is in any way the correct approach for making decisions or managing risk.

        This is not some article saying that the sky is falling without evidence. It is not even an article saying the sky is falling with evidence. It is an article that says that there is a significant risk, due to an entirely preventable man-made problem, where steps can be taken now to reduce the medium-term impact of the problem. And then it lists those steps. Why is this not OK to you?

        • vlovich123 5 minutes ago

          Helium has been increasing in price at about 8% per annum compared with 2% for inflation, so it seems like a strong case that we are actually running out of easily accessible, cheap helium access. Since 2006 there have been 4 global supply disruptions and it’s now believed to be a regular occurrence vs not really happening before.

          It only seems like nothing happens if you stop paying attention.

          • baq an hour ago

            Nothing ever happens eh?

            • ACCount37 29 minutes ago

              Nothing Ever Happens Bias has served me pretty well on those dubious semiconductor supply chain claims.

              The main reason being: materials are cheap - plant time is what's expensive.

              First, raw materials are such a small fraction of chip costs that even if the market price of a given material spikes up two orders of magnitude briefly, the market can eat the spike. For many broadly used materials, this alone is "end of story" - the majority of consumers will balk at the price and exit the market long before semiconductors supply chains will. And second, between the costs of halting production and the low volumes of actual materials involved, supply buffers exist on sites. That plays against supply chain fragility.

              It's one thing to have everything JITted within an inch of its life on a razor thin margins car plant. It's another matter entirely to have a "potential supply disruption" in semiconductor manufacturing that will, if all supply truly and fully stopped tomorrow, convert to actual stopped plants in 4 months unless something is done about it in the meanwhile. And that "unless something is done" bites hard when you have a lot of engineering capability underlined by general price insensitivity. As semiconductor industry does.

          • mullingitover 31 minutes ago

            This particular thing may or may not blow up in our faces, but as long as the US and Israel fail to take vast military power away from their corrupt despots it's only a matter of time before something seriously bad blows up.

            Despots will keep pushing their limits until they get punched in the nose, and so far the only limits they've hit have been a few angry parades.

            • chasil 14 minutes ago

              Eisenhower's Iranian coup in 1953 set much of this in motion.

              I really don't understand the motivation, as British Petroleum (BP) was not a direct U.S. interest.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1953_Iranian_coup_d%27%C3%A9ta...

              • dbspin 27 minutes ago

                Boy do you need to look in a mirror.

                • varispeed 25 minutes ago

                  Funny they will blow up the world, just so they don't face the reality of Epstein files and kompromats in the archives of Moscow.

                  Essentially cowards.

                  and the reckoning will come anyway.

                • littlestymaar 38 minutes ago

                  The more efficient a system is (due to specialization and removal of redundancy), the more fragile it becomes.

                  That's why biological systems look so wasteful (chlorophyll reflecting the more abundant wavelength, etc.)