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    Home » Sections » Electronics and hardware » Apple’s supply chain problems ease

    Apple’s supply chain problems ease

    Foxconn Technology Group has brought the world’s largest iPhone plant to about 90% of anticipated peak capacity.
    By Debby Wu3 January 2023
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    Foxconn Technology Group has brought the world’s largest iPhone plant to about 90% of anticipated peak capacity, suggesting Apple’s biggest main production partner has secured enough workers despite a Covid resurgence and recent staff upheaval.

    Foxconn’s plant in the central Chinese city of Zhengzhou is now operating with roughly 200 000 staff, the official Henan Daily reported, citing Foxconn executive Vic Wang. That is about the normal staffing level, based on previous reports. As of 30 December, the plant was shipping at 90% of the peak capacity forecast at the start of last year, the representative said.

    The factory’s speedy bounce-back bodes well for production of Apple’s marquee product in the run-up to the Lunar New Year shopping season. A nationwide Covid flare-up after Beijing abruptly dropped most Covid Zero-era curbs had clouded the prospects for manufacturers like Foxconn, which require armies of workers to keep factories humming.

    The recent outbreak followed weeks of turmoil at the Zhengzhou plant known as iPhone City, which produces the vast majority of high-end iPhone 14 Pro and Pro Max devices. Thousands of workers fled or staged protests against extreme Covid curbs in November — a movement that reverberated across the country. Foxconn ended most of those restrictions last month and ramped up incentives for both new and existing employees.

    Read: Apple shares tumble to lowest in 18 months

    That unprecedented disruption in turn stoked concerns about iPhone production over the critical holiday period. Apple at one point stood to lose close to six million units of iPhone production as a result of that upheaval.  — (c) 2023 Bloomberg LP

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