Helene’s impact on crucial NC quartz mines still unclear

By Michael Doyle | 09/30/2024 04:25 PM EDT

Two operations that mine for high-quality quartz used in semiconductors sit outside the flooded town of Spruce Pine.

A 300 millimeter wafer with semiconductor chips and finished microchips is pictured.

A new type of 300 millimeter wafer with semiconductor chips and finished microchips. Two operations that mine for quartz used in semiconductor chips are just outside a North Carolina town hit hard by Hurricane Helene. Jens Schlueter/AFP via Getty Images

Tropical Storm Helene’s destructive rampage through parts of western North Carolina inundated a remote mountain town where two mining operations are extracting a remarkably high-quality quartz used in semiconductors, photovoltaic cells and other technology.

Nestled at 2,600 feet in the Appalachian mountains, the town of Spruce Pine and its roughly 2,600 residents are now coping with the aftermath of the flood waters that submerged much of the downtown area. Businesses from DT’s Blue Ridge Java and the Live Oak Gastropub to the Toe River Arts Gallery now face a rebuilding challenge and an uncertain future.

“Tropical Storm Helene has devastated our beloved downtown, with many local businesses suffering significant damage,” the Downtown Spruce Pine group reports on its website that also seeks donations.

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A town official could not be reached Monday.

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