Seoul: South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol and his counterpart US President Joe Biden toured a Samsung Electronics chip plant together on Friday, demonstrating their commitment to expanding the alliance between the two countries beyond the security sphere to global supply chains and other key areas.
The two met at the facility in Pyeongtaek, 70 kms south of Seoul, shortly after Biden arrived in the country on his first visit as president and only 10 days after Yoon took office, reports Yonhap news agency.
After touring the sprawling compound for about 20 minutes, with Samsung Electronics Vice Chairman Lee Jae-yong guiding them, the two shared a stage to give remarks on the deepening cooperation between the countries on semiconductors, supply chains and on charting a future together.
“I hope that through today’s visit, the South Korea-U.S. relationship will be born again into an economic security alliance based on cooperation on cutting-edge technology and supply chains,” Yoon said in his remarks.
“I ask President Biden to not only provide various incentives to our semiconductor companies for their investment in the United States, but to also take a great interest in the investment of advanced American material, equipment and chip design companies in South Korea,” he said.
Yoon also pledged his administration’s full support for the domestic semiconductor industry, saying he will consider the chips a “national security asset” and provide “bold incentives.”
The visit to the chip facility was a highly symbolic move demonstrating the two countries’ solidarity in the face of rising competition from China in securing supply chains amid a post-pandemic shortage of semiconductors, among other key materials.
The Samsung plant is the world’s largest chip production facility, accounting for 15 percent of global memory chip production.
South Korea has the second largest share of the global chip market at 19.9 percent, after the U.S. with 49.8 percent, according to data provided by the presidential office.
In memory chips alone, South Korea has the largest world share at 59 percent.
Biden said the pandemic exposed the fragility of “just in time supply chains” before Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “brutal and unprovoked war in Ukraine” further spotlighted the importance of ensuring “our economic and our national security are not dependent on countries that don’t share our values.”
“A critical component of how we’ll do that,” he said in his speech, “is by working with close partners, who do share our values, like the Republic of Korea, to secure more of what we need from our allies and partners, and bolster our supply chain resilience.”
“The alliance between the Republic of Korea and the United States of America is a linchpin of peace, stability and prosperity for the region and the world that we seek,” he added.