| $55 Billion Michigan Chip Plant Cancelled Amid Tariff Uncertainty and Economic Turmoil Jul 18,2025
 
 ic-pcb.com
 
 On  July 16, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer confirmed  that Sandisk has  scrapped plans to build a massive semiconductor  manufacturing facility  in Mundy Township, Genesee County. The decision  ends a proposed $55  billion investment that was expected to create up  to 10,000 jobs and  become one of the largest economic development  projects in the state's  history.
 
 Sandisk,  which spun off from  Western Digital earlier this year, had selected the  1,300-acre Mundy  site as the sole finalist for a four-factory  chipmaking campus. The  project, dubbed “Project Grit,” would have  produced next-generation  NAND flash memory and spanned 13 million square  feet, with operations  planned between 2025 and 2045. It was supported  by a wide-ranging  package of incentives, including $2.2 billion in state  grants, tax  exemptions, and workforce development funding, along with  more than $20  billion in long-term state and local contributions.
 
 Demolition   work to prepare the site had been underway throughout 2025, funded in   part by $260 million from the Michigan Economic Development Corporation.   But the deal unraveled in recent months as U.S. political   uncertainty—especially over tariffs—intensified and federal CHIPS Act   funding negotiations stalled.
 
 "Massive  national economic  uncertainty" was cited as the key reason behind  Sandisk's withdrawal.  The company reportedly informed state officials  that it no longer  planned to build the plant in Michigan—or anywhere in  the U.S.
 
 The   announcement is a major setback for Michigan's semiconductor ambitions   and for the Biden administration's efforts to revitalize domestic chip   manufacturing through the CHIPS Act. State lawmakers and local leaders   expressed frustration, pointing to former President Donald Trump's   renewed tariffs and criticisms of the CHIPS Act as contributing factors   that raised costs and spooked investors.
 
 "This  could have  transformed the region," said State Rep. Kristen McDonald  Rivet. "But  erratic federal policy and tariffs killed 10,000 high-paying  jobs and a  once-in-a-generation opportunity."
 
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