Apple's Outsourced Lightning Cable Plant In India Goes Up In Flames

Apple supplier Foxlink has admitted a fire damaged its plant in Tirupati, India, and that disruptions to production are to be expected as a result.

Foxlink – or Cheng Uei Precision Industry Co., Ltd. as it is known in Taiwan – bills itself as "a total solution provider for fully-assembled accessories containing essential mechanical and electronic components."

In Tirupati that translates into operating a plant that employs around 400 staff and is believed to build Lightning cables for Apple.

Whatever goes on at the plant, Foxlink acknowledged the February 27 fire in a pair of regulatory filings.

One states: "we followed detailed protocols to evacuate everyone quickly and safely," adding "There were no serious injuries and all employees have returned to their accommodation."

The second filing reports four production lines have been affected, but that as Foxlink is insured for plant, equipment, and inventory the blaze won't impact its bottom line.

At least two months will reportedly be required before production returns to full capacity.

But trouble of another sort may not be far away for Foxlink. Local fire authorities told Reuters that smoke detectors, sprinklers and fire hydrants were faulty, and fire alarms did not go off. Foxlink will feel the regulatory lash if that assessment is verified.

Reuters reported that Foxlink shipped seven million USB-C to Lightning cables in 2022, plus another 1.6 million in January 2023 alone.

With Apple shipping around 250 million iPhones each year, plus close to 100 million iPads, losing part of the production from one Foxlink plant is likely to be an inconvenience rather than a worrying supply chain kink.

But flaming manufacturing plants are not what India wants – right now in particular. It's trying to convince the world that it represents a safe and sensible destination for electronics manufacturing. The 2020 riots at an Indian iPhone factory – sparked by an outsourced manufacturer not promptly paying wages – were not exactly a great advertisement for the nation's drive to make more electronics on home soil for both export and domestic consumption.

Nonetheless, Apple reportedly plans to assemble a quarter of its products in India. And it recently told investors it plans "a lot of emphasis" on local sales during 2023, with purchasing options designed to bring its products within reach of local pay packets. ®

RECENT NEWS

Metas Yann LeCun: Current AI Methods Wont Achieve Human-Level Intelligence

Yann LeCun, Meta’s chief AI scientist, has made a bold assertion that large language models (LLMs) will not achieve hu... Read more

XAI Nears $6 Billion Funding Round With New Investments From Leading VCs

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence venture, xAI, is on the verge of completing a significant $6 billion funding round... Read more

Legal Challenges In Sachin Dev Duggals Entrepreneurial Journey

Sachin Dev Duggal, the visionary founder of Builder.ai, has achieved remarkable success in the tech industry. However, h... Read more

Vertex Ventures To Raise $65 Million For Japan-Focused Fund

Singapore – Vertex Ventures, the venture capital subsidiary of Temasek, is set to launch its first fund dedicated to J... Read more

Tech Industry Takes On Nvidias CUDA With Open-Source AI Software Solutions

Seattle, WA — In a bid to diversify the AI development ecosystem, OpenAI and a coalition of tech companies are working... Read more

Huawei's 'AI-in-a-Box' Solutions Threaten Cloud Market Leaders

Shanghai, China — Huawei is at the forefront of a new trend in the tech industry: 'AI-in-a-box' products that empower ... Read more