SemiMedia SemiMedia
  • Breaking News
  • MarketWatch
  • Distribution
  • Manufacturer
  • Video
  • About us
Home › MarketWatch › South Korean court limits Samsung Electronics union strike over chip operations
  • 0

South Korean court limits Samsung Electronics union strike over chip operations

SemiMediaEdit
May 18, 2026

May 18, 2026 /SemiMedia/ — A South Korean court has largely sided with Samsung Electronics in a legal dispute over planned labor action, ordering the company’s semiconductor operations to maintain normal staffing and production levels during any strike activity.

The Suwon District Court ruled on May 18 that key facilities inside Samsung Electronics’ semiconductor plants, including disaster prevention, exhaust and wastewater systems, qualify as safety protection infrastructure and must continue operating without disruption.

The court also classified wafer-related processes as essential safety operations, requiring them to remain fully operational even during labor action. The ruling effectively obliges union members to maintain the same staffing, operating hours and maintenance standards normally applied on working days, weekends and holidays.

Industry observers said the decision significantly weakens the union’s ability to carry out a full-scale strike because semiconductor fabs rely on continuous operation to prevent wafer damage, equipment instability and production losses.

The court further barred union leaders from blocking worker access to facilities or installing lockout devices that could interfere with factory operations. Financial penalties were also imposed for violations of the order, including daily fines of 100 million won for unions and 10 million won for union leaders.

However, the court rejected Samsung Electronics’ request to prohibit union officials from encouraging or organizing strike participation, preserving the union’s legal right to conduct labor action.

Samsung Electronics’ union had planned an 18-day strike from May 21 to June 7, demanding changes to the company’s bonus structure. The union wants performance incentives to be linked to operating profit instead of economic value added (EVA), while also seeking a system that allocates 15% of operating profit as uncapped bonuses.

The dispute comes as Samsung Electronics remains under pressure to stabilize its semiconductor business amid intensifying competition in memory chips and AI-related semiconductors.

Labor and management resumed negotiations on May 18 through mediation organized by South Korea’s National Labor Relations Commission. Meanwhile, South Korean President Lee Jae-myung publicly stated that both workers’ rights and corporate management rights must be equally respected under the country’s constitutional framework.

Related

chip production lines Electronic components distributor electronic components news Samsung Electronics union semiconductor labor dispute South Korea semiconductor industry wafer manufacturing
Murata to expand thermistor production capacity with new Japan facility
Previous
Tata Electronics, ASML advance India’s first chip fab
Next

All Comments (0)

Back
No Comment.

Top Post

Mouser Electronics expands to the Philippines with local customer service center
Fire broke out at AKM factory in Japan
Qualcomm ranked first in the world's top ten IC design companies
TSMC’s CoWoS capacity to reach 75,000 wafers/month by end-2025
onsemi expects to produce 200mm SiC wafers by 2025
Analyze the key factors and prospects of electronic components shortage from the perspective of wafer industry

Subscribe SemiMedia

Please check your E-mail to confirm the subscribtion.

Related posts

SK hynix aims to triple wafer capacity by 2034 as AI memory demand surges

SK hynix aims to triple wafer capacity by 2034 as AI memory demand surges

June 12, 2026
0
Fire reported at SK hynix Cheongju M15X fab with no casualties

Fire reported at SK hynix Cheongju M15X fab with no casualties

June 12, 2026
0
Applied Materials opens $500 million Singapore campus to expand chip equipment manufacturing

Applied Materials opens $500 million Singapore campus to expand chip equipment manufacturing

June 11, 2026
0
TSMC says price increases remain possible as inflation raises operating costs

TSMC says price increases remain possible as inflation raises operating costs

June 11, 2026
0
Copyright © 2017-2026 SemiMedia. Designed by nicetheme.
  • Breaking News
  • MarketWatch
  • Distribution
  • Manufacturer
  • Video
  • About us
  • electronic components news
  • Electronic components supplier
  • Electronic parts supplier
  • Infineon
  • Electronic component news
  • Electronic components distributor
  • Renesas
  • Vishay
  • STMicroelectronics
  • NXP

SemiMediaEdit

Administrator