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Home Supply Chain

Helium Supply Risk Rises: 64.7% of S. Korea’s Helium from Qatar

2026/03/26
in Supply Chain
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Helium Supply Risk Rises: 64.7% of S. Korea’s Helium from Qatar

According to www.ico-optics.org, the escalating Iran conflict — coupled with ongoing gas disruptions in Qatar — is heightening helium supply risks for Asia’s semiconductor industry, with Fitch Ratings warning of rising tail risk in the region’s chip supply chain.

Why Helium Matters to Chipmakers

Helium, a non-renewable byproduct of natural gas extraction, is indispensable in semiconductor fabrication: it cools critical equipment such as extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography tools and maintains ultra-stable thermal environments in cleanroom fabs. Though used in relatively small volumes, helium’s liquidity and pricing volatility directly impact production continuity. When gas production slows — as seen amid regional instability — spot-market helium demand surges and prices become unpredictable, potentially forcing real-time adjustments to procurement, working capital planning, and production scheduling.

Regional Exposure Across Asia

  • South Korea: Highly vulnerable, sourcing 64.7% of its helium from Qatar. Major memory and logic manufacturers face heightened risk of supply shortfalls, prompting potential renegotiation of contracts, accelerated helium recycling, and reallocation of limited supplies.
  • Taiwan: Also heavily reliant on Qatari gas supplies. While current inventories and statutory stockpiles provide near-term resilience, a disruption lasting several weeks could tighten fab schedules and compel aggressive hedging via long-term contracts or alternative sourcing.
  • Japan: Relatively insulated but not immune — imports ~50% of its helium from the US and maintains both domestic and US-sourced inventories. This diversification buffers price spikes but does not eliminate logistical complexity during global shortages.

Financial and Operational Implications

Fitch notes that if helium buffers fall below safe levels — possibly after six weeks — manufacturers may face tighter allocations, higher procurement costs, and increased working-capital requirements. Earnings volatility could rise, and some production lines may be rescheduled or prioritized for critical products. Larger rated memory-chip companies are better positioned due to long-term contracts, larger inventories, and higher helium recycling rates. In contrast, smaller operators — with thinner margins and fewer hedges — are disproportionately exposed to price spikes and sudden supply shocks.

Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies

Fitch identifies several actionable mitigation levers for supply chain professionals:

  • Diversified long-term contracts across helium-producing regions including the US, Russia, and Algeria
  • Deployment of advanced helium recycling technologies, capable of reclaiming 80%–90% of helium used in fabs
  • Strategic stockpiling and maintenance of buffer inventories to bridge short-term disruptions
  • Multi-sourcing strategies to reduce dependency on any single supplier or geography

For smaller operators, success hinges on supply-chain collaboration, financial hedges, and scalable recycling programs — not just technical upgrades but integrated operational-financial planning.

Source: www.ico-optics.org

Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.

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