Execute EHS Reliably Across Expanding Semiconductor Operations
As Texas Instruments scales new fabrication facilities across the United States, EHS complexity increases fast. Evotix helps standardize processes, manage risk, and maintain compliance across every site, team, and contractor.
Why this matters now
Texas Instruments is investing more than $60 billion to expand semiconductor manufacturing capacity, with new fabrication facilities and site expansions underway across Texas, Utah, and elsewhere in the United States.
As operations scale, EHS becomes harder to execute consistently. More sites, more employees, more contractors, and more regulatory requirements all increase the risk of gaps forming across the program.
The challenge is not designing the program. It is ensuring it runs reliably across every location, every day.
Core value proposition
Ensure incidents, audits, hazards, and actions are captured and managed the same way across every manufacturing site, regardless of location or scale.
Move beyond tracking activity to identifying patterns, reducing repeat incidents, and preventing future risk.
Manage ISO standards, OSHA obligations and environmental reporting from a single, structured system.
Automate workflows and ownership so your team can focus on managing risk, not chasing data.
Where EHS gets hard for Texas Instruments
As new fabrication facilities come online, emissions baselines shift and permit requirements increase across multiple jurisdictions. Tracking and reporting become harder without a single source of truth.
Texas Instruments has already reduced Scope 1 and 2 emissions and is working toward sourcing 100% renewable electricity globally. Maintaining accurate, scalable GHG tracking becomes more complex as operations grow.
Semiconductor manufacturing relies on specialized chemicals and gases that require strict controls, tracking, and reporting. Manual processes create compliance risk and slow down operations.
Incidents create follow-up actions, investigations, and reporting requirements that are difficult to manage across multiple sites without standardization. Gaps in follow-through create regulatory exposure.