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Google Pixel 9 Pro review: the iPhone of Android

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Google Pixel 9 Pro review: the iPhone of Android
Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz.

Google Pixel 9 Pro

MSRP $999.00

“With a compact design, excellent hardware, lovely cameras, and more, the Google Pixel 9 Pro is one of 2024’s best smartphones.”

Pros

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  • Beautiful hardware and display
  • Compact size without compromises
  • It’s pink!
  • Long battery life
  • Great cameras
  • Mostly good AI tools
  • Seven years of updates

Cons

  • Slow charging speeds
  • 128GB base storage

The Google Pixel 9 series is here, and for the first time, those who want a smaller Pro phone can finally have it without needing to compromise on features. Google has given me the Pro phone that I’ve been hoping for.

The Google Pixel 9 Pro is the middle child of the Pixel 9 line. It’s physically the same size as the base model Pixel 9, but it has the same features as the larger Pixel 9 Pro XL. It’s the Goldilocks of the Pixel 9 slabs.

If you want a flagship Android phone that is not monstrously large, packs in plenty of power, has a gorgeous design, and even comes in pink, then the Pixel 9 Pro is one of the best choices you can make.

Google Pixel 9 Pro: specs

Dimensions 152.8 x 72.0 x 8.5 mm (6 x 2.8 x 0.3 inches)
Weight 199 grams (7 ounces)
Display 6.3-inch Super Actua OLED display, 1280 x 2856 resolution at 495 ppi, 1-120Hz refresh rate, 2,000 nits (HDR)/3,000 nits (peak)
Durability Corning Gorilla Glass Victus 2, IP68
Colors Obsidian, Porcelain, Hazel, Rose Quartz
Processor Tensor G4
RAM 16GB
Storage 128GB, 256GB, 512GB, 1TB
Software Android 14
Updates Seven years of OS, security, and Pixel Drop updates
Rear cameras 50MP main, f/1.68, 82-degree FOV
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48MP ultrawide, f/1.7, 123-degree FOV

48MP telephoto, f/2.8, 22-degree FOV, 5x optical zoom

Front camera 42MP with autofocus, f/2.2, 103-degree FOV
Battery 4,700mAh
Charging 30W wired charging (55% in 30 minutes)

21W wireless with Google Pixel Stand

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12W wireless with Qi-compatible chargers

Reverse wireless charging

Price Starts at $999

Google Pixel 9 Pro: design

Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz.
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

The Pixel 9 Pro’s design is one of my favorite things about the phone. While the Pixel line has always had a unique look that sets it apart from the competition, the new aesthetic for the Pixel 9 lineup as a whole really stands out. In a way, it feels so much more modern and sleek than before.

This year, Google flattened the frame across the entire Pixel 9 family, similar to what Apple has done for several years with the iPhone. When you combine this with the rounded corners, the Pixel 9 Pro is very comfortable to hold, even for extended periods of time.

Another big change is the new camera bar. Rather than extending out to the phone’s edges, it is now an elongated capsule shape that’s more like a camera island. Honestly, I like this new design better than the old one. It’s still distinctive, like the camera bar, but it looks much cleaner.

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The Pixel 9 Pro’s design is one of my favorite things about the phone.

The back of the Pixel 9 Pro is a matte finish glass, and the aluminum frame has a glossy polish, making it look very premium. The buttons are tactile and have a nice click when pressed, the speakers sound great, and the new ultrasonic fingerprint sensor is very reliable. The Pixel 9 Pro also has an IP68 rating for dust and water resistance and uses Corning Gorilla Glass Victus 2, so it’s extremely durable. Also, props to Google for keeping a physical SIM card tray at the bottom.

Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz.
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

I’ve seen people say that the Pixel 9 redesign feels very iPhone-like, and that’s fair criticism. But maybe that’s also why I like it so much. The Pixel 9 Pro is just well-made hardware with a premium look and feel. It’s really beautiful this year.

And hey, Google gave us a pink (Rose Quartz) color, which I absolutely love. If pink isn’t your color, there is also Obsidian, Porcelain, and Hazel.

Google Pixel 9 Pro: screen and performance

Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz showing home screen.
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

The Pixel 9 Pro has a 6.3-inch display, just like the base model Pixel 9, but it is a Super Actua LTPO OLED panel with 1280 by 2856 resolution at 495 pixels per inch (ppi) and a variable refresh rate from 1Hz to 120Hz. It also gets 2,000 nits of brightness for HDR content and peaks at 3,000 nits, making this display very usable outdoors. Further, the screen features a uniformly thin bezel all around.

By default, the Pixel 9 Pro is set to the “high resolution” option, which is a slightly lower 960 by 2142 resolution to save battery power. Changing it to “full resolution” was one of the first things I did when I set up my Pixel 9 Pro — it’s worth the slight battery drain, in my eyes.

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The Pixel 9 Pro’s Super Actua display is just beautiful.

The Pixel 9 Pro’s Super Actua display is just beautiful, and everything looks great. The colors are bright and vibrant without being overpowering. Whites are truly white, and blacks are deep and inky. Text is sharp and crisp, and scrolling is incredibly fluid with the “Smooth display” setting on.

Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz showing Google Photos.
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

Regarding performance, the Pixel 9 Pro packs quite a punch with the Tensor G4 chip and 16GB RAM, a first for the Pixel line.

Though Google’s Tensor chips had a rough start, it began to shape up with G3, and the G4 has been doing quite well so far in my testing. I have not experienced any overheating issues with the Pixel 9 Pro, which was a problem with previous models, and all of my apps and games run smoothly without any issues. Opening apps, switching between them, taking many photos, playing games, and everything else is done seamlessly without fault.

Google Pixel 9 Pro: cameras

Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz.
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

Pixels are known for having reliable cameras, and thankfully, that doesn’t change with the Pixel 9 Pro. Even though this is the smaller version of the Pro this year, Google did not skimp out on the camera hardware, unlike Apple with the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max.

The Pixel 9 Pro is equipped with a triple-lens camera system on the rear that features a 50-megapixel main camera, 48MP ultrawide camera, and 48MP telephoto camera. On the front, we have a 42MP selfie camera. The rear cameras are the same as the Pixel 8 Pro, but the selfie camera significantly improved from its 10.5MP predecessor.

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No matter what I’m taking a photo of, the Pixel 9 Pro makes getting a great picture effortless.

I’ve been thoroughly enjoying using the cameras on the Pixel 9 Pro because no matter what I’m taking a photo of, the Pixel 9 Pro makes getting a great picture effortless. I primarily use the primary camera for my shots, and it produces punchy yet balanced colors and packs plenty of detail into each shot without overdoing it. Even lowlight images come out fantastic.

Of course, let’s not dismiss the secondary cameras on the Pixel 9 Pro. The 48MP ultrawide camera is a big jump from its predecessor (a 12MP lens), and the 123-degree field of view (FOV) lets you get more of a scene into the frame. The jump in resolution also means better colors and detail than before. The ultrawide lens is also used for macro shots, with good results.

The 48MP telephoto lens is also great. It’s capable of 5x optical zoom, though you can go as far as 30x with Super Res Zoom. I have had pretty good results with the telephoto camera, though I did notice that some images seem to have a bit of noise and grain if there is a black or dark surface. I’m not sure if that’s because I went further than 5x, but it’s just something to keep in mind.

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And for the front-facing camera, selfie lovers rejoice! You’ll get accurate skin tones, plenty of detail, and good color in your selfies. Having autofocus is a nice improvement this year, and the Pro models have a wider 103-degree FOV than the 95 degrees of the base model Pixel 9.

I’ve really been enjoying taking photos with my Pixel 9 Pro. I have yet to take a bad picture and have been reaching for my Pixel 9 Pro over my iPhone 15 Pro for the cameras (and more). Google knocked it out of the park this year.

Google Pixel 9 Pro: software and AI features

Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz showing app drawer.
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

The most peculiar thing about the Pixel 9 line this year is that it ships with Android 14, not Android 15, as we had originally anticipated. This is the first time a Pixel has launched without the newest version of Android. Despite that, the Pixel 9 Pro still has a handful of new software and AI tricks.

First, the Pixel 9 series has its own dedicated weather app, Pixel Weather. It has a beautiful design with dynamic backgrounds, and it places the most important data front and center. Pixel Weather also uses AI to generate a simple one-sentence weather report, though you can expand it to include additional data points.

Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz showing Pixel Weather.
Pixel Weather Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

Underneath the weather report is the hourly and 10-day forecast, followed by small tiles of various weather metrics. These tiles can be rearranged with a drag-and-drop gesture to prioritize what you want to see first when scrolling.

Another new app is Pixel Screenshots. Many of us take screenshots of something we see on our phones to remember later. But when you take a lot of them, it can be hard to find a specific one, and they add clutter to your camera roll. The Screenshots app changes all of that.

With Pixel Screenshots, any new screenshots you capture are saved here instead of Google Photos. You can organize screenshots into groups and collections and even search through them using Gemini, all done on-device.

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Google Pixel Screenshots app running on a Google Pixel 9.
Pixel Screenshots Joe Maring / Digital Trends

Google is also putting Gemini front and center, as it replaces the legacy Google Assistant, though you can switch it back if you want to. With the Pixel 9 Pro devices (including the XL and Fold), you can also get a year of Gemini Advanced for free, while regular Pixel 9 users can get a one-month trial of Gemini Advanced.

Once you sign up for Gemini Advanced, you can access Gemini Live. This is Google’s conversational experience with Gemini that allows you to have a free-flowing conversation with Gemini as if it’s an actual person. It can understand natural language, and you can even interrupt it to provide more context or change the subject. If you want to refer back to it later, your conversations are saved as a transcript.

I’ve tried Gemini Live, and while it’s pretty cool how well it can understand a flowing conversation, I don’t think I’ll be using it that frequently. It is helpful for small things like setting reminders and alarms, but restrictions like no access to contacts, shopping lists, or smart home devices make it a bit limiting.

Then, there’s the Pixel Studio app. This is the image generation app where you can enter a prompt, and it will create an image for you. It’s a fine idea, though it’s also had a troubling start by generating a lot of inappropriate and questionable photos. I’m not a big fan of image generation in general, though I will say that the Pixel Studio app itself is simple and easy to use. I could live without it, but if this is your sort of thing, it’s here.

Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz showing Gemini Live.
Gemini app Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

Google has added more AI photo tools to the Pixel 9 lineup, including Add Me and Reimagine with Magic Editor. The Add Me tool lets you take two group photos, one of which has the original photographer, and merge them together so that everyone is in the shot.

The Reimagine tool in Magic Editor is a little more concerning. This tool lets you tweak sections of a photo with nonhuman objects and change it to something else by typing in a text prompt. While you can use it to change backgrounds to something fun and cute, it can also be used in nefarious ways since these images don’t have an AI watermark. In a world already full of misinformation, is this really a tool that Google should have given everyone with a Pixel 9? I’m not sure.

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Aside from that, the software on the Pixel 9 Pro is pretty much the same stock Android that we’ve come to know and love on Pixel devices. The Pixel 9 lineup is slated to get seven years of Android upgrades, security patches, and feature drops.

Unfortunately, Android 15 will count as one of those major Android upgrades, which is unfortunate. But will you still be using the Pixel 9 Pro in 2030?

Google Pixel 9 Pro: battery life and charging

Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz showing battery life.
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

Inside the Pixel 9 Pro is a 4,700mAh capacity battery cell. While previous Pixel phones weren’t too impressive in terms of battery life, I’m happy to report that the Pixel 9 Pro breaks that streak.

Of course, the larger Pixel 9 Pro XL has superior battery life due to the larger 5,060mAh battery, but the Pixel 9 Pro (and even the Pixel 9) is not shabby at all. I’ve been using the Pixel 9 Pro for the past week, and I typically end the day with around 40% left — less if I push it during the day. I’ve been averaging around three to four hours of screen time.

I think Google’s claim of around 24 hours of battery life this year is accurate. You can even bump that up to about 100 hours if you enable Extreme Battery Saver. If I’m pretty light on the usage, I can easily go around another half-day before plugging it in.

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Like most companies, Google does not include a power adapter in the box, but you do get a USB-C cable. While the Pixel 9 Pro XL gets the fastest charging speed of 37W, the Pixel 9 Pro only gets 27W. This equates to about 55% charge in 30 minutes and a little over an hour for a full charge.

For wireless charging, you can get up to 21W speeds with the second-generation Google Pixel Stand or 12W with standard Qi-certified wireless chargers. There is also reverse wireless charging. Unfortunately, Google chose not to add Qi2 support this year.

Google Pixel 9 Pro: price and availability

Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz.
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

Google announced the entire Pixel 9 lineup on August 13. As of September 4, the Pixel 9 Pro is available for purchase.

The Pixel 9 Pro comes in four colors: Rose Quartz, Hazel, Obsidian, and Porcelain. It costs $999 for 128GB, $1,099 for 256GB, $1,219 for 512GB, and $1,449 for 1TB. You can purchase the Pixel 9 Pro from the Google Store, Amazon, Best Buy, and most carriers in the U.S.

Google Pixel 9 Pro: verdict

Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz.
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

Since I started using Android, I’ve been partial to Pixel phones, but Google hit a home run with the Pixel 9 Pro. This is the best way to experience Android, and the hardware is simply fantastic.

The best part of the Pixel 9 Pro is its size. I’m a fan of smaller phones, and I love that Google is finally giving us a choice if we want the Pro model without compromises. I’ve been reaching for the Pixel 9 Pro over my iPhone 15 Pro and even prefer it to the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra simply due to how compact it is. Combine that with the excellent construction, fun new camera design, and the pink color, and I’m a happy camper.

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I’ve been reaching for the Pixel 9 Pro over my iPhone 15 Pro.

While I’m not a massive fan of all the AI additions, I must admit that some are useful — like the Pixel Weather and Pixel Screenshots apps. Add Me is a fun little gimmick, but I’m not sure if I’ll use it all the time for group photos. I wish that Google put more thought into the ramifications of specific tools like Reimagine. I also hope Pixel Studio gets better about the wild images it can generate.

Whether you like those features or not, the good news is that you can use the ones you like and ignore the ones you don’t. Either way, you still get top-notch hardware, excellent cameras, great battery life, and reliable performance. What’s not to like?

If you’ve been waiting for a powerful flagship phone that isn’t a pain to hold and use, the Pixel 9 Pro is absolutely the phone for you. It’s the best compact flagship available today and one of the best phones available in 2024. Don’t miss out on this one.

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PlayStation bug showed what gamers really think of ads | Kaser Focus

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PlayStation bug showed what gamers really think of ads | Kaser Focus

Earlier this week, many gamers were shocked to turn on their PlayStation 5 consoles, only to be confronted with a dramatic change to their dashboards: Usually, each game’s icon on the dashboard has a piece of art from that game as a background. Instead, they saw full-screen promotional news posts and advertisements for the game (or sometimes sales in which that game featured) as backgrounds instead. The ads were often outdated or irrelevant to the user — especially given they usually owned the games in question.

PlayStation quickly rolled out a fix and assured users this was a bug introduced in a major update, not a change in its advertising strategy. However, mistake or no, it also offers a glimpse into how players would respond if PlayStation actually rolled out a change such as this. Needless to say, they weren’t happy. The biggest complaint on sites like X and Reddit was that there was no apparent way to disable this despite the PS5 having a setting to turn off ads. Some users went so far as to say these full-page promotional images put them off of using their PS5s entirely.

The second biggest was that the ads and news shown in the new display weren’t relevant and often months out-of-date. Users pointed out that this would prove especially bothersome when playing older games, as these promotional posts might include spoilers or just be comically old. But for the most part, users who noticed this change were clear: They didn’t want intrusive ads on their dashboards. Despite this being a bug, it could prove to be valuable as a case study if PlayStation ever did consider rolling out fullscreen dash ads.

In personal news, I’ll likely still be catching up on September’s games before the October releases — such as Silent Hill 2 Remake, Metaphor: ReFantazio and Dragon Age: The Veilguard — start to show up. That being said, since it is the spooky season officially, I might try my hand at Zoochosis, an atmospheric indie horror title that cropped up online.

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Join us for GamesBeat Next!

GamesBeat Next is almost here! GB Next is the premier event for product leaders and leadership in the gaming industry. Coming up October 28th and 29th, join fellow leaders and amazing speakers like Matthew Bromberg (CEO Unity), Amy Hennig (Co-President of New Media Skydance Games), Laura Naviaux Sturr (GM Operations Amazon Games), Amir Satvat (Business Development Director Tencent), and so many others. See the full speaker list and register here.


What to play this week

What’s new:

  • Until Dawn Remastered
  • Throne and Liberty
  • NHL 25
  • Starfield: Shattered Space
  • Master Detective Archives: Rain Code Plus
  • Metal: Hellsinger VR
  • Zoochosis
  • Mobile Suit Gundam: Silver Phantom
  • Sword Art Online: Fractured Daydream
  • Kill Knight
  • SpongeBob Squarepants: The Patrick Star Game

New on subscription services:

  • MLB The Show 24 (Xbox Game Pass)
  • Open Roads (Xbox Game Pass)
  • Sifu (Xbox Game Pass)
  • WWE 2K24 (PlayStation Plus Essential)
  • Dead Space (PlayStation Plus Essential)
  • Doki Doki Literature Club Plus! (PlayStation Plus Essential)
  • Alien Isolation (Amazon Luna Prime)
  • Mortal Shell (Amazon Luna Prime)
  • Dusk (Amazon Luna Prime)
  • Perish (Amazon Luna Prime)
  • Tormented Souls (Amazon Luna Prime)
  • Amid Evil (Amazon Luna Prime)
  • Valfaris (Amazon Luna Prime)
  • Doomblade (Amazon Luna Prime)
  • Monster Harvest (Amazon Luna Prime)
  • Bear and Breakfast (GeForce Now)
  • Monster Jam Showdown (GeForce Now)
  • TerraTech Worlds (GeForce Now)
  • NBA 2K25 Arcade Edition (Apple Arcade)

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20U 19" Thermostatic Sandwich Electrical Cabinet For Outdoor

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20U 19" Thermostatic Sandwich Electrical Cabinet For Outdoor



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The latest on the WordPress fight over trademarks and open source

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The latest on the WordPress fight over trademarks and open source

Over the past several weeks, WordPress cofounder Matt Mullenweg has made one thing exceedingly clear: he’s in charge of WordPress’ future.

Mullenweg heads up WordPress.com and its parent company, Automattic. He owns the WordPress.org project, and he even leads the nonprofit foundation that controls the WordPress trademark. To the outside observer, these might appear to be independent organizations, all separately designed around the WordPress open-source project. But as he wages a battle against WP Engine, a third-party WordPress hosting service, Mullenweg has muddied the boundaries between three essential entities that lead a sprawling ecosystem powering almost half of the web.

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You’ll want to try Meta’s amazing new AI video generator

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Meta AI Movie Gen

Meta has shared another contestant in the AI video race that’s seemingly taken over much of the industry in recent months. The tech giant released a new model called Movie Gen, which, as the name indicates, generates movies. It’s notably more comprehensive in its feature list than many others in its initial rollout, comparable to OpenAI‘s Sora model, which garnered so much attention upon its initial unveiling. That said, Movie Gen also shares with Sora a limitation on access to specific filmmakers partnering with Meta rather than a public rollout.

Movie Gen is impressive based on the demonstrations of its ability to produce movies from text prompts, as seen above. The model can make 16-second videos and upscale them to 1080p resolution. The caveat is that the video comes out at 16 frames per second, a speed slower than any filming standard. For a more normal 24 fps, the film clip can’t be more than 10 seconds long. 

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Will semiconductor production be derailed by Hurricane Helene?

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Will semiconductor production be derailed by Hurricane Helene?

Constructing a semiconductor chip

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The deadliest hurricane to strike the US mainland since Hurricane Katrina has also drawn attention for its potential disruptions to the tech industry. Destruction from Hurricane Helene is threatening one of the industry’s major supply chains – a North Carolina mining town that supplies high-purity quartz crucial for manufacturing the chips found in smartphones and data centres worldwide.

The mining town of Spruce Pine is among the many US communities impacted by Hurricane Helene, which killed more than 200 people in multiple states, displaced thousands and left more than a million homes and businesses without power. The storm pushed 900 kilometres inland from the Florida coast and inflicted deadly floods across a wide region, even reaching deep within the Blue Ridge mountains of North Carolina, where the Spruce Pine quartz mines are located.

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Here is what you need to know about how Helene’s ripple effects could impact the tech industry.

Why is high-purity quartz so important?

High-purity quartz is used to make fused-quartz crucibles, cylindrical containers that are key to the chip-manufacturing process because they can endure the high temperatures required to melt silicon. The melting-point temperature for semiconductor-grade polysilicon is around 1425°C (2597°F), and quartz crucibles can typically withstand temperatures of up to 1650°C (3000°F).

In the chip manufacturing process, the fused-quartz crucibles are filled with molten silicon. A silicon seed crystal is dipped into the melted silicon within the spinning crucible so that it can grow into a significantly larger silicon ingot before being gradually drawn out. A fully grown ingot can weigh over 500 kilograms.

Those silicon ingots are then cut into silicon wafers, which in turn can be imprinted with the transistor patterns that form the foundation of modern computer chips.

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Where does high-purity quartz come from?

The natural deposits of quartz found in Spruce Pine originated when North America and Africa collided to form the supercontinent Pangaea about 300 million years ago. That process created the Appalachian mountains and also forced part of Earth’s oceanic crust to sink beneath North America, where the intense heat and pressure near the planet’s mantle melted ocean sediment and rock.

The resulting lava slowly cooled over time to form pegmatite rock deposits containing large mineral crystals – including high-purity quartz. These pegmatite formations eventually became more accessible near the surface because of more geological upheaval and weathering.

How did Hurricane Helene impact quartz mining operations?

The Spruce Pine mining district currently has quartz mining and refining operations owned by Belgium-based Sibelco and Norway-based The Quartz Corp. Both companies shut down operations on 26 September and have not yet said when they might restart.

The companies say they have confirmed the safety of their employees and contractors in the area – and they described relatively minimal direct damage to their facilities.

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“The initial assessment indicates that our operating facilities in the Spruce Pine region have only sustained minor damage,” said Sibelco in a 3 October statement. “Our dedicated teams are on-site, conducting cleanup and repair activities to restart operations as soon as we can.”

Hurricane Helene caused record flooding and damage

Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images

“We have been able to conduct the first visual inspections of our plants and it would appear that damage is mostly concentrated around ancillary units,” said The Quartz Corp in a statement on 2 October. But the company also cautioned that resumption of mining operations “will also depend on the rebuilding of local infrastructure” – many of the roads in the area were closed and damaged in the immediate wake of the storm.

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Similarly, Sibelco referenced power outages from the storm as one challenge. “Restoring power remains crucial to resuming our operations,” said the company in its statement. “The repair of power lines leading to our plants has progressed significantly.”

The Quartz Corp also described having stockpiles of quartz in Norway that could be used in ongoing purification processing operations, along with additional “safety stocks of finished products” that could avoid any critical shortages for customers – including semiconductor manufacturers – in the short or medium term.

Will Helene disrupt the supply of semiconductors?

Major semiconductor manufacturers have said that they currently do not expect disruptions to their operations in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene.

TSMC, a Taiwanese company that is the world’s leading chip maker, described having “diverse global suppliers” to draw upon. “Through an effective risk management system and close partnerships with suppliers, we currently do not anticipate any significant impact on the company’s operations,” says a TSMC spokesperson. “We will keep monitoring the situation closely.”

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Samsung Electronics, which ranks as the second largest chip maker and is headquartered in South Korea, told New Scientist that the company’s operations were not affected.

GlobalFoundries, the largest semiconductor manufacturer based in the US, described itself as having the “flexibility to leverage alternative sources for key supplies” with chip-making facilities on three continents. “We are in contact with our global suppliers and do not expect any disruption to our supply of quartz due to Hurricane Helene,” says a GlobalFoundries spokesperson.

Companies that produce raw silicon wafers currently have wafer stockpiles sufficient to last anywhere from three to eight months, said Dylan Patel at SemiAnalysis, an independent research firm, in a social media post.

Are there alternative sources of quartz for the global semiconductor industry?

Spruce Pine “has a near unique combination of purity, availability and price,” wrote Ed Conway, a journalist at Sky News and author of Material World, in a Substack post. But he also pointed to other high-purity quartz mines in China, Russia and Brazil.

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Natural high-purity quartz deposits are “scarce”, but companies can use purification methods if needed or even synthetically produce pure quartz, said Patel. He also pointed to the company Ferroglobe, which acquired a high-purity quartz mine in South Carolina in October 2023. A company press release projected that mining operations could begin in the second half of 2024.

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