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The investment will result in more advanced memory chips that can help make gadgets smaller By Martyn Williams
19 Jun 2009

TOKYO, 19 JUNE 2009 - SanDisk plans to invest US$500 million this year to upgrade a flash memory plant that it operates with Toshiba in Japan, but says the time isn't right to spend even more money on a new factory the two companies had planned but recently put on hold, according to Japan's Nikkei newspaper.

The investment will be matched by Toshiba, the newspaper quoted SanDisk CEO Eli Harari as saying in an interview. A SanDisk spokesman was not immediately available to confirm the information.

The money will be used to upgrade production to the most advanced type of flash memory chips: 32-nanometer chips, so called because of the size of the smallest features on the chip surface.

Flash memory is used in numerous consumer electronics gadgets such as cell phones, digital cameras and portable music players, and more advanced production techniques allow for smaller chips or for the storage capacity of single chips to rise. Both are in demand from gadget makers.

Harari also told the newspaper that the unclear outlook for the flash memory market means SanDisk is not ready to commit to building a new flash memory factory with Toshiba. The Japanese company earlier this year postponed plans to build two new chip factories in Japan because of the downturn in the global economy.

SanDisk and Toshiba have cooperated on flash memory development and production for many years.

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