EX-1.01 2 fy2021cmrdraftv2.htm EX-1.01 Document

Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
Conflict Minerals Report
For the Reporting Period from January 1 to December 31, 2021
This Conflict Minerals Report for Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (“AMD”) covers the reporting period from January 1 to December 31, 2021 and has been prepared in accordance with Section 13(p) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), Rule 13p-1 and Form SD thereunder (the “Conflict Minerals Rule” or “Rule”). The Conflict Minerals Rule requires disclosure of certain information by companies filing reports with the Securities Exchange Commission (“SEC”) that manufacture, or contract to manufacture, products for which certain minerals specified in Section 13(p) of the Exchange Act and the Rule as “conflict minerals” are necessary to the functionality or production of those products. The term “conflict minerals” is defined as columbite-tantalite (coltan), cassiterite, gold, wolframite and their derivatives, which are limited to tantalum, tin and tungsten. For the purposes of this report, tin, tungsten, tantalum and gold will collectively be referred to as the “3TG”. The term “Covered Countries” for purposes of the Conflict Minerals Rule are the Democratic Republic of the Congo (“DRC”) and the following adjoining countries: the Republic of the Congo, the Central African Republic, South Sudan, Rwanda, Uganda, Zambia, Burundi, Tanzania and Angola.
References in this Conflict Minerals Report to “AMD,” “we,” “us” or “our” mean Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. and our consolidated subsidiaries. The term “armed groups” means an armed group that is identified as a perpetrator of serious human rights abuses in annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices under sections 116(d) and 502B(b) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 relating to the DRC or an adjoining country.
Overview of our Program
Our efforts to break the link between the minerals trade and conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo began in 2008. Through industry initiatives and collaboration with our supply chain, we work to support the responsible sourcing of minerals from Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas (CAHRA) which includes Covered Countries. Since then, our view and insight into the minerals supply chain have developed beyond 3TG to include cobalt. Our goal is to source only from smelters and refiners that participate and are conformant to third-party audit programs such as the Responsible Minerals Initiative's (RMI) Responsible Minerals Assurance Process (RMAP), London Bullion Market Association (LBMA), or Responsible Jewelry Council (RJC). As we learn more about potential social and environmental impacts, we continue to assess our supply chain and have prioritized minerals for additional due diligence.
We designed our program in alignment with the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains of Minerals from Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas, Third Edition, including the related supplements on gold, tantalum, tin and tungsten (the “OECD Guidance”). The SEC has recognized the OECD Guidance as an appropriate nationally and internationally recognized due diligence framework for conflict mineral reporting purposes.

1



We contribute to industry efforts to as a member of the Responsible Business Alliance (“RBA”) and are an active member of RMI. Through RMI, we connect with industry members, governments, non-profits, and other stakeholders to contribute to mitigating the salient social and environmental impacts of extraction and processing of minerals in supply chains. We support the RMI’s efforts to develop standards and tools that benefit all companies working to break the link between minerals trade and conflict. Specifically, AMD staff participate in RMI multi-stakeholder calls and due diligence meetings, as well as utilize RMI tools and resources for reporting and risk management.
Product and Supply Chain Description
We are a global semiconductor company primarily offering:
x86 microprocessors, as standalone devices or as incorporated as an accelerated processing unit (“APU”), chipsets, discrete and integrated graphics processing units (“GPUs”), data center and professional GPUs and development services; and
server and embedded processors, semi-custom System-on-Chip (“SoC”) products, development services and technology for game consoles.
For a detailed description of our business and products, see “Part I, Item 1—Business” of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 26, 2021, filed with the SEC.
All of our products may contain 3TG that are necessary to the functionality or production of such products, therefore, all of our products are in scope for this report. As a fabless semiconductor company, our manufacturing operations are wholly outsourced to a carefully selected network of suppliers. AMD performs due diligence on relevant suppliers that AMD buys from directly and that provide materials and/or manufacturing services collectively referred to as “Manufacturing Suppliers.”
Due Diligence
Design of our Program
The AMD due diligence process aligns with the OECD Guidance and framework for due diligence.
Step 1: Establish strong company management system
Step 2: Identify and assess risks in the supply chain
Step 3: Design and implement a strategy to respond to identified risks
Step 4: Carry out independent third-party audit of supply chain due diligence at identified points in the supply chain
Step 5: Report on supply chain due diligence

2



Step 1: Establish Strong Company Management Systems
Responsible Minerals Policy. We have established a responsible minerals sourcing policy that outlines our commitment, approach and expectations for sourcing materials used in our products. Our policy is available at https://www.amd.com/system/files/documents/responsible-minerals-policy.pdf.
AMD has adopted the RBA Code of Conduct as the AMD Supplier Code of Conduct (“the Code”). and expects our suppliers to operate in accordance with the Code and its expectations which span labor, health and safety, environment, ethics and management systems. The Code requires suppliers to maintain a conflict minerals policy and conduct supply chain due diligence to ensure compliance to the Code.
Internal Management Systems. The AMD responsible minerals team is responsible for the development of due diligence processes and the internal management systems that implement our responsible minerals policy. Our team works closely with the Corporate Responsibility team to set the program strategy and assess supply chain risks. We provide training to sourcing managers and work with them to collect data and communicate expectations to suppliers. The AMD Corporate Vice President of Global Procurement oversees the strategic priorities and receives quarterly reports outlining risks and due diligence progress.
Control Systems. The Conflict Mineral Reporting Template (“CMRT”) obtained from our Manufacturing Suppliers allowed us to gather information that was important for our due diligence efforts, including the 3TG contained in the Manufacturing Suppliers’ products and the names of smelters or refiners in the Manufacturing Suppliers’ own supply chain. We elected to use the CMRT because it is an internationally recognized and commonly used tool that facilitates efficient data gathering and aggregation. We also provided our Manufacturing Suppliers with the Code and communicated with them our responsible mineral policy to source only from smelters and refiners conformant to independent third-party audit programs.
Supplier Engagement. We communicate our Responsible Minerals Sourcing Policy annually to suppliers through our annual Supplier Acknowledgment Letter. AMD monitors CMRT submissions and developed tools to flag actions required to meet our sourcing expectations. We also support capability building by utilizing the RMI Learning Academy to provide responsible mineral sourcing training to suppliers.
Grievance Mechanisms. We established open lines of communication that serve as grievance mechanisms to provide employees, suppliers and others outside of AMD to report violations of our policies or other concerns. Parties external to AMD may contact our responsible minerals team to report grievances, via a dedicated email address that is published in our responsible minerals policy. In addition, AMD employees and third-parties may anonymously report suspected violations using AMD Aware, available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. AMD Aware is staffed by non-AMD personnel, who share any information reported with our Corporate Compliance Committee.

3



AMD encourages the use of the RMI’s Minerals Grievance Platform to report OECD Annex II risks in the mineral supply chain. Anonymous submissions can be made at https://mineralsgrievanceplatform.org.
Step 2: Identifying and Assessing Risks in our Supply Chain.
We identify Manufacturing Suppliers that may contribute necessary 3TG to our products. Manufacturing Suppliers are requested to complete an annual supply chain survey, using the CMRT. In addition, responsible mineral sourcing is taken into consideration as part of the AMD strategic sourcing process. We expect suppliers to report accurately and to conduct good-faith due diligence to ensure minerals used in their products to not benefit armed conflict or contribute to social and environmental abuses.
In accordance with OECD Guidelines, it is important to understand risk levels associated with mineral sourcing in the supply chain. The basis of this understanding stems from smelter or refiner information provided by our Manufacturing Suppliers. We leverage the RMI process and tools to inform our risk assessment. Each facility that meets the RMI definition of a smelter or refiner of a 3TG mineral is assessed according to red flag indicators aligned with in the OECD Guidance. AMD uses the following factors to determine the risk level of each smelter and refiner:
Known mineral source country of origin;
Responsible Minerals Assurance Process (RMAP) audit status;
Credible evidence of unethical or conflict sourcing;
Peer Assessments conducted by credible third-party sources.
We also validate smelters through RMAP’s cross-recognition policy, which mutually recognizes the independent third-party gold refiner audit programs from the LBMA and RJC. In addition, we identified smelters that are member companies of the Tungsten Industry – Conflict Minerals Council (“TI-CMC”) progressing toward RMAP validation.
Step 3: Designing and Implementing a Response to Identified Risks.
The goal of the Responsible Minerals Program at AMD is to build the capability of suppliers for them to report 100 percent of smelters and refiners are conformant to industry standards at a company level. Corporate level conformance promotes transparency and responsible sourcing beyond our own supply chain.
Our internal tools enable us to review potential or actual risks identified during the due diligence process primarily through the review of CMRTs submitted to AMD. If or when our expectations are not met and if certain identified risks are not resolved, the business relationship between AMD and that supplier will be evaluated with relevant procurement managers and could result in potential removal as an approved vendor to AMD.

4



In 2021 100% of the smelters and refiners reported to be in our supply chain participated in RMAP. We leverage our participation in RMI to encourage responsible parties to implement corrective actions and to take the necessary steps to comply with industry standards. AMD recognizes the importance of conducting additional due diligence when smelters and refiners are located or sourcing from CAHRAs. AMD is aligned with industry best practices and takes actions to remove smelters and refiners that are not compliant with industry standards or are known to contribute to environmental or human rights abuses. Suppliers are given 90 days to remove smelters and refiners of concern. If our expectations are not met by the supplier, the situation is reviewed by the AMD Corporate Vice President of Global Procurement and may result in removing the supplier as an approved vendor.
Table 1: Smelter Participation in Third-Party Audit Programs
Table 1 lists the number of operational smelters and refiner facilities, identified by our surveyed manufacturing suppliers, that as of January 20, 2022 are:
picture1.jpg
Step 4: Independent Third-Party Audits of Smelter’s and Refiner’s Due Diligence Practices.
We support the development and implementation of RMAP standards through our RMI membership. Through the RMI, we encourage smelters or refiners to participate in RMAP. Any reported smelters or refiners who were not part of the RMAP or equivalent schemes are removed from the supply chain.
Step 5: Publicly Report our Supply Chain Due Diligence. The AMD Responsible Minerals Policy is published on our website and our annual Corporate Responsibility Report includes updates and progress on our Responsible Minerals Sourcing Program. Our Specialized Disclosure Report on Form SD for the reporting period from January 1 to December 31, 2021, which includes this Conflict Minerals Report, is also available at https://www.amd.com/en/corporate-responsibility/responsible-minerals-sourcing.


5



Steps to Further Mitigate Risk and Improve Due Diligence
AMD continues to take steps to improve our due diligence process to further mitigate the risk that 3TGs in our products could benefit armed groups in the DRC or adjoining countries. These steps include:
Continue to evaluate upstream sources through a broader set of tools to evaluate risk;
Engage with suppliers more closely and provide more information and training resources regarding responsible sourcing of 3TGs;
Encourage suppliers to have due diligence procedures in place for their supply chains to improve the content of the responses from such suppliers;
Continue to include an Environmental and Social Governance (ESG) clause in new or renewed supplier contracts, as well as included in the terms and conditions of each purchase order issued; and
Following the OECD Guidance process, increase the emphasis on validated smelter and refiner information from the supply chain through feedback and detailed smelter analysis.
Reasonable Country of Origin Inquiry
AMD is required under the Rule to conduct a good-faith, reasonable country of origin inquiry (“RCOI”) to determine whether any of the necessary 3TG in our products either originated in the Covered Countries or came from recycled or scrap materials.
In 2021, RCOI efforts included requiring suppliers to complete the CMRT (see Identifying and Assessing Risks in our Supply Chain). To determine the country of origin of 3TG in our products, we utilized the RMI RMAP’s Reasonable Country of Origin Inquiry Data (the “RMI RCOI Data”). The RMI RCOI Data provides country of origin information for the raw materials used by smelters or refiners that are reported by the RMAP as being conformant with their assessment standards (i.e., demonstrated with reasonable confidence that the smelter or refiner’s due diligence processes are aligned with the expectations in the OECD). Available RMI RCOI Data provides traceability upstream to countries of origin at an aggregate level. Since the most detailed information is shown as groupings of countries, we are unable to determine with certainty the specific countries from which the 3TG in our products may be sourced.
Results of Efforts to Determine Country of Origin
Through our RCOI effort, AMD identified 15 of 244 smelters and refiners are known to source from the Covered Countries, all of which are conformant to third-party audit standards. In addition, 27 smelters and refiners source recycled and scrap materials, all of which are conformant to third-party audit standards.


6



Table 2: Smelters and refiners sourcing recycled and scrap materials.
image_1.jpg


7



Table 3: Reasonable Country of Origin Inquiry List
Countries from which minerals in AMD products may have originated based on sourcing information disclosed during third-party auditing processes and RMI’s Reasonable Country of Origin Inquiry, report dated January 28, 2022, are believed to be the following as well as recycled and scrap sources:
ArgentinaGuatemalaPortugal
ArmeniaGuineaRussian Federation
AustraliaGuyanaRwanda
AustriaHondurasSaudi Arabia
AzerbaijanIndiaSenegal
BelgiumIndonesiaSerbia
BeninIvory CoastSierra Leone
BoliviaJapanSingapore
BotswanaKazakhstanSlovakia
BrazilKenyaSolomon Islands
BulgariaKyrgyzstanSouth Africa
Burkina FasoLaosSouth Korea
BurundiLiberiaSpain
CanadaMadagascarSudan
ChileMalaysiaSuriname
ChinaMaliSwaziland
ColombiaMauritaniaSweden
Democratic Republic of the CongoMexicoTaiwan
Costa RicaMongoliaTajikistan
CubaMontenegroTanzania
CyprusMoroccoThailand
Dominican RepublicMozambiqueTurkey
EcuadorMyanmarUganda
EritreaNamibiaUnited Kingdom
EthiopiaNew ZealandUnited States
FijiNicaraguaUruguay
FinlandNigerUzbekistan
FranceNigeriaVenezuela
French GuianaOmanVietnam
GeorgiaPapua New GuineaZambia
GermanyPeruZimbabwe
GhanaPhilippines


8



Table 4: AMD Smelter and Refiner List
Table 4 lists the facilities which, to the extent known, process the necessary minerals in our products based on the responses from the CMRT. Some Manufacturing Suppliers completed the CMRT at the company level for only those products that they provide to AMD. Due to this, our list of smelters or refiners may contain more facilities than those that actually processed the 3TG contained in our products. This list only includes smelters and refiners that have been verified by RMI as eligible operating facilities as of January 20, 2022.
MetalSmelter NameCountry
GoldAdvanced Chemical CompanyUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
GoldAida Chemical Industries Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldAgosi AGGERMANY
GoldAlmalyk Mining and Metallurgical Complex (AMMC)UZBEKISTAN
GoldAngloGold Ashanti Corrego do Sitio MineracaoBRAZIL
GoldArgor-Heraeus S.A.SWITZERLAND
GoldAsahi Pretec Corp.JAPAN
GoldAsaka Riken Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldAurubis AGGERMANY
GoldBangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (Central Bank of the Philippines)PHILIPPINES
GoldBoliden ABSWEDEN
GoldC. Hafner GmbH + Co. KGGERMANY
GoldCCR Refinery - Glencore Canada CorporationCANADA
GoldCendres + Metaux S.A.SWITZERLAND
GoldChimet S.p.A.ITALY
GoldChugai MiningJAPAN
GoldDSC (Do Sung Corporation)KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
GoldDODUCO Contacts and Refining GmbHGERMANY

9



GoldDowaJAPAN
GoldEco-System Recycling Co., Ltd. East PlantJAPAN
GoldJSC Novosibirsk RefineryRUSSIAN FEDERATION
GoldLT Metal Ltd.KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
GoldHeimerle + Meule GmbHGERMANY
GoldHeraeus Metals Hong Kong Ltd.CHINA
GoldHeraeus Germany GmbH Co. KGGERMANY
GoldInner Mongolia Qiankun Gold and Silver Refinery Share Co., Ltd.CHINA
GoldIshifuku Metal Industry Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldIstanbul Gold RefineryTURKEY
GoldJapan MintJAPAN
GoldJiangxi Copper Co., Ltd.CHINA
GoldAsahi Refining USA Inc.UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
GoldAsahi Refining Canada Ltd.CANADA
GoldJSC UralelectromedRUSSIAN FEDERATION
GoldJX Nippon Mining & Metals Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldKazzincKAZAKHSTAN
GoldKennecott Utah Copper LLCUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
GoldKojima Chemicals Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldLS-NIKKO Copper Inc.KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
GoldMaterionUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
GoldMatsuda Sangyo Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldMetalor Technologies (Suzhou) Ltd.CHINA

10



GoldMetalor Technologies (Hong Kong) Ltd.CHINA
GoldMetalor Technologies (Singapore) Pte., Ltd.SINGAPORE
GoldMetalor Technologies S.A.SWITZERLAND
GoldMetalor USA Refining CorporationUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
GoldMetalurgica Met-Mex Penoles S.A. De C.V.MEXICO
GoldMitsubishi Materials CorporationJAPAN
GoldMitsui Mining and Smelting Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldMoscow Special Alloys Processing PlantRUSSIAN FEDERATION
GoldNadir Metal Rafineri San. Ve Tic. A.S.TURKEY
GoldNavoi Mining and Metallurgical CombinatUZBEKISTAN
GoldNihon Material Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldOhura Precious Metal Industry Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldOJSC "The Gulidov Krasnoyarsk Non-Ferrous Metals Plant" (OJSC Krastsvetmet)RUSSIAN FEDERATION
GoldPAMP S.A.SWITZERLAND
GoldPrioksky Plant of Non-Ferrous MetalsRUSSIAN FEDERATION
GoldPT Aneka Tambang (Persero) TbkINDONESIA
GoldPX Precinox S.A.SWITZERLAND
GoldRand Refinery (Pty) Ltd.SOUTH AFRICA
GoldRoyal Canadian MintCANADA
GoldSamduck Precious MetalsKOREA, REPUBLIC OF
GoldSEMPSA Joyeria Plateria S.A.SPAIN
GoldShandong Zhaojin Gold & Silver Refinery Co., Ltd.CHINA
GoldSichuan Tianze Precious Metals Co., Ltd.CHINA

11



GoldSOE Shyolkovsky Factory of Secondary Precious MetalsRUSSIAN FEDERATION
GoldSolar Applied Materials Technology Corp.TAIWAN, PROVINCE OF CHINA
GoldSumitomo Metal Mining Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldTanaka Kikinzoku Kogyo K.K.JAPAN
GoldShandong Gold Smelting Co., Ltd.CHINA
GoldTokuriki Honten Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldTorecomKOREA, REPUBLIC OF
GoldUmicore S.A. Business Unit Precious Metals RefiningBELGIUM
GoldUnited Precious Metal Refining, Inc.UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
GoldValcambi S.A.SWITZERLAND
GoldWestern Australian Mint (T/a The Perth Mint)AUSTRALIA
GoldYamakin Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldYokohama Metal Co., Ltd.JAPAN
GoldZhongyuan Gold Smelter of Zhongjin Gold CorporationCHINA
GoldGold Refinery of Zijin Mining Group Co., Ltd.CHINA
GoldSAFINA A.S.CZECHIA
GoldUmicore Precious Metals ThailandTHAILAND
GoldGeib Refining CorporationUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
GoldMMTC-PAMP India Pvt., Ltd.INDIA
GoldKGHM Polska Miedz Spolka AkcyjnaPOLAND
GoldSingway Technology Co., Ltd.TAIWAN, PROVINCE OF CHINA
GoldAl Etihad Gold Refinery DMCCUNITED ARAB EMIRATES
GoldEmirates Gold DMCCUNITED ARAB EMIRATES

12



GoldT.C.A S.p.AITALY
GoldREMONDIS PMR B.V.NETHERLANDS
GoldKorea Zinc Co., Ltd.KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
GoldMarsam MetalsBRAZIL
GoldTOO Tau-Ken-AltynKAZAKHSTAN
GoldSAAMPFRANCE
GoldL'Orfebre S.A.ANDORRA
Gold8853 S.p.A.ITALY
GoldItalpreziosiITALY
GoldSAXONIA Edelmetalle GmbHGERMANY
GoldWIELAND Edelmetalle GmbHGERMANY
GoldOgussa Osterreichische Gold- und Silber-Scheideanstalt GmbHAUSTRIA
GoldBangalore RefineryINDIA
GoldSungEel HiMetal Co., Ltd.KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
GoldPlanta Recuperadora de Metales SpACHILE
GoldSafimet S.p.AITALY
GoldEco-System Recycling Co., Ltd. North PlantJAPAN
GoldEco-System Recycling Co., Ltd. West PlantJAPAN
GoldMetal Concentrators SA (Pty) Ltd.SOUTH AFRICA
TantalumAsaka Riken Co., Ltd.JAPAN
TantalumChangsha South Tantalum Niobium Co., Ltd.CHINA
TantalumGuangdong Rising Rare Metals-EO Materials Ltd.CHINA

13



TantalumExotech Inc.UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TantalumF&X Electro-Materials Ltd.CHINA
TantalumXIMEI RESOURCES (GUANGDONG) LIMITEDCHINA
TantalumJiuJiang JinXin Nonferrous Metals Co., Ltd.CHINA
TantalumJiujiang Tanbre Co., Ltd.CHINA
TantalumAMG BrasilBRAZIL
TantalumMetallurgical Products India Pvt., Ltd.INDIA
TantalumMineracao Taboca S.A.BRAZIL
TantalumMitsui Mining and Smelting Co., Ltd.JAPAN
TantalumNPM Silmet ASESTONIA
TantalumNingxia Orient Tantalum Industry Co., Ltd.CHINA
TantalumQuantumCleanUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TantalumYanling Jincheng Tantalum & Niobium Co., Ltd.CHINA
TantalumSolikamsk Magnesium Works OAORUSSIAN FEDERATION
TantalumTaki Chemical Co., Ltd.JAPAN

14



TantalumTelex MetalsUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TantalumUlba Metallurgical Plant JSCKAZAKHSTAN
TantalumHengyang King Xing Lifeng New Materials Co., Ltd.CHINA
TantalumD Block Metals, LLCUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TantalumFIR Metals & Resource Ltd.CHINA
TantalumJiujiang Zhongao Tantalum & Niobium Co., Ltd.CHINA
TantalumXinXing HaoRong Electronic Material Co., Ltd.CHINA
TantalumJiangxi Dinghai Tantalum & Niobium Co., Ltd.CHINA
TantalumKEMET de MexicoMEXICO
TantalumTANIOBIS Co., Ltd.THAILAND
TantalumTANIOBIS GmbHGERMANY
TantalumH.C. Starck Hermsdorf GmbHGERMANY
TantalumH.C. Starck Inc.UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TantalumTANIOBIS Japan Co., Ltd.JAPAN
TantalumTANIOBIS Smelting GmbH & Co. KGGERMANY

15



TantalumGlobal Advanced Metals BoyertownUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TantalumGlobal Advanced Metals AizuJAPAN
TantalumResind Industria e Comercio Ltda.BRAZIL
TantalumJiangxi Tuohong New Raw MaterialCHINA
TantalumMeta MaterialsNORTH MACEDONIA, REPUBLIC OF
TinChenzhou Yunxiang Mining and Metallurgy Co., Ltd.CHINA
TinAlphaUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TinPT Aries Kencana SejahteraINDONESIA
TinDowaJAPAN
TinEM VintoBOLIVIA (PLURINATIONAL STATE OF)
TinFenix MetalsPOLAND
TinGejiu Non-Ferrous Metal Processing Co., Ltd.CHINA
TinGejiu Zili Mining And Metallurgy Co., Ltd.CHINA
TinGejiu Kai Meng Industry and Trade LLCCHINA
TinChina Tin Group Co., Ltd.CHINA
TinMalaysia Smelting Corporation (MSC)MALAYSIA
TinMetallic Resources, Inc.UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TinMineracao Taboca S.A.BRAZIL
TinMinsurPERU
TinMitsubishi Materials CorporationJAPAN

16



TinJiangxi New Nanshan Technology Ltd.CHINA
TinO.M. Manufacturing (Thailand) Co., Ltd.THAILAND
TinOperaciones Metalurgicas S.A.BOLIVIA (PLURINATIONAL STATE OF)
TinPT Artha Cipta LanggengINDONESIA
TinPT Babel Inti PerkasaINDONESIA
TinPT Babel Surya Alam LestariINDONESIA
TinPT Bukit TimahINDONESIA
TinPT Mitra Stania PrimaINDONESIA
TinPT Prima Timah UtamaINDONESIA
TinPT Refined Bangka TinINDONESIA
TinPT Sariwiguna BinasentosaINDONESIA
TinPT Stanindo Inti PerkasaINDONESIA
TinPT Timah Tbk KundurINDONESIA
TinPT Timah Tbk MentokINDONESIA
TinPT Timah NusantaraINDONESIA
TinPT Tinindo Inter NusaINDONESIA
TinRui Da HungTAIWAN, PROVINCE OF CHINA
TinSoft Metais Ltda.BRAZIL
TinThaisarcoTHAILAND
TinGejiu Yunxin Nonferrous Electrolysis Co., Ltd.CHINA
TinWhite Solder Metalurgia e Mineracao Ltda.BRAZIL
TinYunnan Chengfeng Non-ferrous Metals Co., Ltd.CHINA
TinTin Smelting Branch of Yunnan Tin Co., Ltd.CHINA

17



TinCV Venus Inti PerkasaINDONESIA
TinMagnu's Minerais Metais e Ligas Ltda.BRAZIL
TinMelt Metais e Ligas S.A.BRAZIL
TinPT ATD Makmur Mandiri JayaINDONESIA
TinO.M. Manufacturing Philippines, Inc.PHILIPPINES
TinPT Rajehan AriqINDONESIA
TinResind Industria e Comercio Ltda.BRAZIL
TinMetallo Belgium N.V.BELGIUM
TinMetallo Spain S.L.U.SPAIN
TinPT Sukses Inti MakmurINDONESIA
TinThai Nguyen Mining and Metallurgy Co., Ltd.VIET NAM
TinPT Menara Cipta MuliaINDONESIA
TinHuiChang Hill Tin Industry Co., Ltd.CHINA
TinGuangdong Hanhe Non-Ferrous Metal Co., Ltd.CHINA
TinChifeng Dajingzi Tin Industry Co., Ltd.CHINA
TinPT Bangka SerumpunINDONESIA
TinTin Technology & RefiningUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TinMa'anshan Weitai Tin Co., Ltd.CHINA
TinPT Rajawali Rimba PerkasaINDONESIA
TinLuna Smelter, Ltd.RWANDA
TinYunnan Yunfan Non-ferrous Metals Co., Ltd.CHINA
TinPT Mitra Sukses GlobalindoINDONESIA
TungstenA.L.M.T. Corp.JAPAN

18



TungstenKennametal HuntsvilleUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TungstenGuangdong Xianglu Tungsten Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenChongyi Zhangyuan Tungsten Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenGlobal Tungsten & Powders Corp.UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TungstenHunan Chenzhou Mining Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenHunan Chunchang Nonferrous Metals Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenJapan New Metals Co., Ltd.JAPAN
TungstenGanzhou Huaxing Tungsten Products Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenKennametal FallonUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TungstenWolfram Bergbau und Hutten AGAUSTRIA
TungstenXiamen Tungsten Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenGanzhou Jiangwu Ferrotungsten Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenJiangxi Yaosheng Tungsten Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenJiangxi Xinsheng Tungsten Industry Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenJiangxi Tonggu Non-ferrous Metallurgical & Chemical Co., Ltd.CHINA

19



TungstenMalipo Haiyu Tungsten Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenXiamen Tungsten (H.C.) Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenJiangxi Gan Bei Tungsten Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenGanzhou Seadragon W & Mo Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenAsia Tungsten Products Vietnam Ltd.VIET NAM
TungstenChenzhou Diamond Tungsten Products Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenH.C. Starck Tungsten GmbHGERMANY
TungstenTANIOBIS Smelting GmbH & Co. KGGERMANY
TungstenMasan High-Tech MaterialsVIET NAM
TungstenJiangwu H.C. Starck Tungsten Products Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenNiagara Refining LLCUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TungstenChina Molybdenum Tungsten Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenGanzhou Haichuang Tungsten Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenHydrometallurg, JSCRUSSIAN FEDERATION
TungstenUnecha Refractory metals plantRUSSIAN FEDERATION

20



TungstenPhilippine Chuangxin Industrial Co., Inc.PHILIPPINES
TungstenXinfeng Huarui Tungsten & Molybdenum New Material Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenACL Metais EireliBRAZIL
TungstenWoltech Korea Co., Ltd.KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
TungstenMoliren Ltd.RUSSIAN FEDERATION
TungstenKGETS Co., Ltd.KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
TungstenFujian Ganmin RareMetal Co., Ltd.CHINA
TungstenLianyou Metals Co., Ltd.TAIWAN, PROVINCE OF CHINA
TungstenCronimet Brasil LtdaBRAZIL


21