Cellphone
pioneer Motorola announced Wednesday that it's opening a Texas
manufacturing facility that will create 2,000 jobs and produce its new
flagship device, Moto X, the first smartphone ever assembled in the US.
The
company has already begun hiring for the Fort Worth plant. The site was
most recently unoccupied but was once used by fellow phone manufacturer
Nokia, meaning it was designed to produce mobile devices, said Will
Moss, a spokesman for Motorola Mobility, which is owned by Google.
"It
was a great facility in an ideal location," said Moss, who said it will
be an easy trip for Motorola engineering teams based in Chicago and
Silicon Valley, and is also close to the company's service and repair
operations in Mexico.
The formal announcement
came at AllThingsD's D11 Conference in Rancho Palos Verdes, California,
from Motorola CEO Dennis Woodside.
Texas
Governer Rick Perry's office administers a pair of special state
incentive funds meant to help attract job-creating businesses to the
state, but Moss said the Republican governor did not distribute any
money to close this deal.
"Motorola Mobility's
decision to manufacture its new smartphone and create thousands of new
jobs in Texas is great news for our growing state," Perry said through a
spokeswoman. "Our strong, healthy economy, built on a foundation of low
taxes, smart regulation, fair legal system and a skilled workforce is
attracting companies from across the country and around the world that
want to be a part of the rising Texas success story."
The
factory will be owned and run by Flextronics International Ltd., a
Singapore-based contract electronics manufacturer that has had a long
relationship with Motorola.
Assembly accounts
for relatively little of the cost of a smartphone. The cost largely lies
in the chips, battery and display, most of which come from Asian
factories. For instance, research firm iSuppli estimates that the
components of Samsung's latest flagship phone, the Galaxy S4, cost $229,
while the assembly costs $8.
In December,
Apple said it would move manufacturing of one of its existing lines of
Mac computers to the US this year, reversing decades of increasing
outsourcing. The company has come under some criticism for working
conditions at the Chinese factories where its products are assembled.
Some other manufacturers, such as Hewlett-Packard, have kept some PC assembly operations in the US.
Moss
said the Moto X will go on sale this summer. He said he could provide
few details, citing priority secrets. He said the idea from the
beginning was to bring manufacturing back to the US.
"It's
obviously our major market so, for us, having manufacturing here gets
us much closer to our key customers and partners as well as our end
users," he said. "It makes for much leaner, more efficient operations."
But Motorola will still have global manufacturing operations, including at factories in China and Brazil.
"Fact
remains that more than 130 million people in the US are using
smartphones," Mark Randall, Motorola's senior vice president of supply
chain and Operations, said in a statement, "but until Moto X, none of
those smartphones have been built in the USA."

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