0001193125-23-156574.txt : 20230530 0001193125-23-156574.hdr.sgml : 20230530 20230530160719 ACCESSION NUMBER: 0001193125-23-156574 CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE: SD PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT: 2 13p-1 1.01 20221231 1.02 20221231 FILED AS OF DATE: 20230530 DATE AS OF CHANGE: 20230530 FILER: COMPANY DATA: COMPANY CONFORMED NAME: RAMBUS INC CENTRAL INDEX KEY: 0000917273 STANDARD INDUSTRIAL CLASSIFICATION: SEMICONDUCTORS & RELATED DEVICES [3674] IRS NUMBER: 943112828 STATE OF INCORPORATION: DE FISCAL YEAR END: 1231 FILING VALUES: FORM TYPE: SD SEC ACT: 1934 Act SEC FILE NUMBER: 000-22339 FILM NUMBER: 23976376 BUSINESS ADDRESS: STREET 1: 4453 NORTH FIRST STREET, SUITE 100 CITY: SAN JOSE STATE: CA ZIP: 95134 BUSINESS PHONE: 408-462-8000 MAIL ADDRESS: STREET 1: 4453 NORTH FIRST STREET, SUITE 100 CITY: SAN JOSE STATE: CA ZIP: 95134 SD 1 d467341dsd.htm SD SD

 

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

 

FORM SD

 

 

SPECIALIZED DISCLOSURE REPORT

 

 

Rambus Inc.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

 

 

Delaware   000-22339   94-3112828

(State or other jurisdiction

of incorporation)

 

(Commission

File Number)

 

(I. R. S. Employer

Identification No.)

4453 North First Street, Suite 100

San Jose, California 95134

(Address of principal executive offices) (ZIP code)

John Shinn, Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary

(408) 462-8000

(Name and telephone number, including area code, of the person to contact in connection with this report)

 

 

Check the appropriate box to indicate the rule pursuant to which this form is being filed, and provide the period to which the information in this form applies:

 

Rule 13p-1 under the Securities Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13p-1) for the reporting period from January 1, 2022 to December 31, 2022.

 

 

 


Section 1 – Conflict Minerals Disclosure

Item 1.01 Conflict Minerals Disclosure and Report

This Form SD is being filed pursuant to Rule 13p-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

A copy of Rambus Inc.’s Conflict Minerals Report for the period from January 1, 2022 through December 31, 2022 is filed as Exhibit 1.01 to this Form SD.

The information in this Form SD, including the Conflict Minerals Report, is publicly available on our website at www.rambus.com.

Item 1.02 Exhibit

Rambus Inc. is hereby filing its Conflict Minerals Report as Exhibit 1.01 as required by Item 1.01 of this Form SD.

Section 2 – Exhibits

Item 2.01 Exhibits

Exhibit 1.01 – Rambus Inc. Conflict Minerals Report for the reporting period January 1, 2022 to December 31, 2022 as required by Items 1.01 and 1.02 of this Form SD.

 

2


SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.

 

RAMBUS INC.

/s/ John Shinn

John Shinn, Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary

Date: May 30, 2023

 

3


EX-1.01 2 d467341dex101.htm EX-1.01 EX-1.01

Exhibit 1.01

Rambus Inc.

Conflict Minerals Report

For the Reporting Period from January 1, 2022 to December 31, 2022

Introduction

This Conflict Minerals Report (this “Report”) of Rambus Inc. (“we,” “Rambus” or the “Company”) for the reporting period January 1, 2022 to December 31, 2022 (the “Reporting Period”) has been prepared in accordance with the requirements of Rule 13p-1 (the “Rule”) and Form SD promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.

The Rule requires disclosure of certain information when a company manufactures or contracts to manufacture products where the minerals specified in the Rule are necessary to the functionality or production of those products. The specified minerals are referred to as “Conflict Minerals,” which include gold, columbite-tantalite (coltan), cassiterite, wolframite and their derivatives, which are limited to tantalum, tin and tungsten. The “Covered Countries” for purposes of the Rule and this Report are the Democratic Republic of Congo (the “DRC”), or any adjoining country, including the Republic of Congo, the Central African Republic, South Sudan, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Tanzania, Zambia and Angola.

This Report and Form SD can be found on our website at www.rambus.com.

Company Overview

Rambus is a provider of industry-leading chips and silicon IP making data faster and safer. With over 30 years of advanced semiconductor experience, we are a pioneer in high-performance memory subsystems that solve the bottleneck between memory and processing for data-intensive systems. Whether in the cloud, at the edge or in your hand, real-time and immersive applications depend on data throughput and integrity. Rambus products and innovations deliver the increased bandwidth, capacity and security required to meet the world’s data needs and drive ever-greater end-user experiences.

During the Reporting Period we continued to ship our physical semiconductor products, including chips and design and testing/verification hardware. We offer DDR4 and DDR5 chipsets for RDIMM, LRDIMM and NVDIMM server modules that support the data center and enterprise server infrastructure markets, as well as verification boards that help our Silicon IP customers with the design of their chips, and security testing-related equipment. For such products we operate a fabless business model and use third-party foundries, assembly and test manufacturing contractors, and equipment suppliers to manufacture, assemble, test and provide our semiconductor products.

Description of the Company’s Conflict Minerals Policy

Our goal is to eliminate the use of Conflict Minerals. We are aware that our physical semiconductor products contain tin, tantalum, tungsten and gold (“3TG”) metals that are necessary to the functionality or production of those products. To this end, Rambus works with its applicable suppliers to identify the sources of all3TG metals used in our physical semiconductor products. If any of these metals originate from the Covered Countries, then further investigation is required.

We use the tools provided by the Responsible Minerals Initiative (“RMI”) to gather information from our suppliers. The information requested includes the name and location of smelters or refiners used to produce the metals, and the origin of the minerals. Our due diligence process and efforts are consistent with the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (“OECD”) Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains of Minerals from Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas (“OECD Guidance”).

Our Conflict Minerals Policy can be found on our website at www.rambus.com.


Description of the Company’s Supply Chain

Because we operate a fabless business model, we do not directly purchase 3TG from mines, smelters, or refiners. Therefore, we must rely on our suppliers to provide information regarding the country of origin of Conflict Minerals that are included in the Covered Products (as defined below). Many of our suppliers do not purchase raw materials directly and must rely on their downstream suppliers and sub-suppliers to determine the origin of their raw materials. Thus, reliably determining the origin is a difficult task, and our suppliers are highly dependent on the information provided to them by their suppliers and sub-suppliers which are often far removed from the direct smelter or refiner. Additionally, many of our suppliers are not directly subject to the same conflict minerals law and regulations as we are.

Identification of Conflict Minerals and of the Company’s Products Covered by this Report

We sent a questionnaire to our operating business units inquiring whether during the Reporting Period any of our units manufactured or contracted to manufacture any products containing Conflict Minerals necessary to such products’ functionality or production.

Based on these inquiries, we determined that our chipsets, design assistive/verification boards and security testing equipment were the only products that met this test (“Covered Products”). We found that Conflict Minerals were not necessary to the functionality or production of any product that we manufactured or contracted to manufacture other than the Covered Products that we contracted to manufacture during the Reporting Period.

From this information, we developed a list of direct suppliers within our applicable supply chain to be surveyed and who provided 3TG materials for our products. Engineering and evaluation materials were not included in our analysis.

Description of the Company’s Reasonable Country of Origin Inquiry

We conducted in good faith a reasonable country of origin inquiry (“RCOI”) with respect to the Covered Products that were manufactured or contracted to be manufactured by us during the Reporting Period. The RCOI is reasonably designed to determine if any of the Conflict Minerals in the Covered Products originated in the Covered Countries and whether any of the Conflict Minerals may be from recycled or scrap sources.

Once we identified our list of suppliers, we began the process of surveying the supply chain using the RMI’s Conflict Minerals Reporting Template (“CMRT”). The CMRT is used predominantly throughout the electronics industry and requests relevant information, including details of the smelters and refiners where the materials were processed and the location of mines where the minerals originated.

We informed each identified supplier of our desire to use only materials verified to be conflict-free and asked them to return a completed CMRT. Responses were reviewed for completeness, reasonableness, and consistency, and we followed up with our suppliers for corrections and clarifications as needed.

Based on the responses from the suppliers, we were not able to conclusively determine the complete geographic origin of all 3TG materials used in ourCovered Products. Therefore, we proceeded to perform the due diligence process outlined below.

Description of the Company’s Due Diligence Process

Based on the information provided to us by our suppliers, we undertook additional due diligence processes and efforts based on the OECD Guidance in order to determine if any Conflict Materials included in our Covered Products may have originated in the Covered Countries and if so, whether they benefited armed groups in those countries.

In accordance with the OECD Guidance, the design of our due diligence includes the five steps described below.

 

2


Step 1: Establish Strong Company Management Systems

We have completed a number of steps to establish a management system for addressing the sourcing of Conflict Minerals in our Covered Products. These actions include:

 

   

Adopt and Commit to a Supply Chain Policy for Conflict Minerals: We are committed to responsible relationships with customers, suppliers and business partners under our Code of Business Conduct and Ethics (“Code of Conduct”) publicly available on our website at www.rambus.com. Our Code of Conduct standards apply worldwide and outline expected behaviors for everyone who works for us or serves on our Board of Directors. These expected behaviors include, without limitation, conducting all business relationships, including with suppliers, in an honest and ethical manner and in compliance with all applicable laws and refraining from participating or aiding a supplier who is seeking to commit an unethical act. We have also adopted a Conflict Minerals Policy.

 

   

Internal Management to Support Supply Chain Due Diligence: We have established a management system for disclosing our use of Conflict Minerals under the Rule. This management system is sponsored by our General Counsel as well as executive-level representatives and a team of subject matter experts from relevant functions such as finance, legal, operations and engineering. The team of subject matter experts is responsible for ensuring our Conflict Minerals disclosure compliance.

 

   

Controls and Transparency to Support Supply Chain Diligence: As described above, we undertook an RCOI with respect to the Conflict Minerals in our supply chain by requesting a CMRT be completed by each of our suppliers to gather information about their use of Conflict Minerals, the smelters and refiners in their supply chain that are included in our Covered Products, and the countries of origin for such Conflict Minerals.

 

   

Supplier Engagement: With respect to the OECD requirement to strengthen engagement with suppliers, we inform our suppliers of our conflict mineral efforts and that they are expected to investigate their supply chains for conflict minerals information and inform us of the results.

 

   

Grievance Mechanism: Code of Conduct contains procedures whereby employees can report violations.

 

   

Maintain records: We have an existing document retention policy that includes retaining Conflict Minerals due diligence documentation.

Step 2: Identify and Assess Risk in the Supply Chain

As a fabless producer of semiconductor products, we have no direct relationship with 3TG suppliers. Thus, we rely on our direct suppliers to provide us with the necessary information about the source of Conflict Minerals contained in the Covered Products that we contract with them to manufacture for us. Our suppliers are similarly reliant upon information provided by their suppliers to provide information regarding the country of origin of Conflict Minerals that are included in the Covered Products. Thus, there is a risk that the final information provided to us and upon which we rely is incomplete or inaccurate.

Step 3: Carry Out Independent Third-Party Audit of Supply Chain Due Diligence at Identified Points in the Supply Chain

Because we do not have direct relationships with suppliers of the 3TG materials, we rely upon third parties to perform audits and certify smelters/refiners as conflict-free. Responsible Minerals Assurance Process (RMAP) coordinates audits of 3TG smelters/refiners and publishes lists of those that are found to be conflict-free by following OECD Guidelines. The RMI also publishes names of smelters/refiners that are actively in the process of becoming certified conflict-free, but have not completed the process to date. Rambus uses these published lists to determine if the smelters and refiners supplying 3TG materials for our Covered Products are conflict-free. If the sources of all 3TG materials for a product have been identified as conflict-free, then Rambus likewise considers such product as conflict-free.

 

3


Step 4: Report on Supply Chain Due Diligence

We report on our due diligence efforts as required by law. We publicly filed the Form SD and this Report with the SEC.

This Report includes information about the RCOI we undertook, our due diligence process designed to conform with the OECD Guidelines, the list of known smelters and refiners utilized in our supply chain identified in our due diligence process, and a description of our products that incorporate Conflict Minerals necessary to the functionality or production of such products.

Findings and Conclusions

During the Reporting Period, we utilized eight suppliers with respect to our physical semiconductor products and required all of these suppliers to perform and report on their supply chain due diligence through the use of the CMRT. We received a 67% response rate to our requests. Responses from our suppliers using the CMRT have been reviewed, combined and summarized. Responding parties provided a CMRT which includes a declaration page and a list of smelter and refinery names. Based on the information provided to us by our suppliers, we believe that, to the extent reasonably determinable, the facilities that were used to process the Conflict Minerals contained in the Covered Products included the smelters and refiners listed in Annex I below.

All responding suppliers provided complete lists of smelters representing 100% of the 3TG materials they utilized. All of suppliers declared that a portion of the 3TG metals came from the Covered Countries. However, these suppliers also indicated that such materials came from a smelter or refiner that has been audited and is listed as conflict-free and conformant by the RMI.

We combined the responses from all suppliers and prepared a list of unique smelter or refiner names. We then used the RMI conformance lists to determine if the Conflict Minerals originate from the Covered Countries and could be benefitting armed groups. All of the smelters/refiners on our list have been verified as conformant by the RMAP. Therefore, based on our due diligence efforts, we conclude the Conflict Minerals contained in our Covered Products come from suppliers using smelters or refiners listed as conformant by RMI. However, we rely on our direct suppliers to provide us with the necessary information about the source of Conflict Minerals contained in the Covered Products that we contract with them to manufacture for us and our suppliers are similarly reliant upon information provided by their suppliers. Thus, there is a risk that the final information provided to us and upon which we rely is incomplete or inaccurate.

 

4


ANNEX I – SMELTER LIST

 

Mineral

  

Smelter Name

   Smelter ID   

Country

  

Status

Gold    Tanaka Kikinzoku Kogyo K.K.    CID001875    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Aida Chemical Industries Co., Ltd.    CID000019    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Asahi Pretec Corp.    CID000082    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Dowa    CID000401    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Ishifuku Metal Industry Co., Ltd.    CID000807    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    JX Nippon Mining & Metals Co., Ltd.    CID000937    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Kojima Chemicals Co., Ltd.    CID000981    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Matsuda Sangyo Co., Ltd.    CID001119    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Mitsubishi Materials Corporation    CID001188    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Mitsui Mining and Smelting Co., Ltd.    CID001193    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Nihon Material Co., Ltd.    CID001259    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Sumitomo Metal Mining Co., Ltd.    CID001798    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Tokuriki Honten Co., Ltd.    CID001938    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Asaka Riken Co., Ltd.    CID000090    JAPAN    Conformant
Gold    Metalor Technologies (Hong Kong) Ltd.    CID001149    CHINA    Conformant
Gold    Metalor Technologies (Singapore) Pte., Ltd.    CID001152    SINGAPORE    Conformant
Gold    Shandong Zhaojin Gold & Silver Refinery Co., Ltd.    CID001622    CHINA    Conformant
Gold    Metalor Technologies S.A.    CID001153    SWITZERLAND    Conformant
Gold    Metalor USA Refining Corporation    CID001157    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Gold    Gold Refinery of Zijin Mining Group Co., Ltd.    CID002243    CHINA    Conformant
Gold    Heraeus Metals Hong Kong Ltd.    CID000707    CHINA    Conformant
Gold    Western Australian Mint (T/a The Perth Mint)    CID002030    AUSTRALIA    Conformant
Gold    Asahi Refining Canada Ltd.    CID000924    CANADA    Conformant
Gold    Asahi Refining USA Inc.    CID000920    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Gold    Umicore S.A. Business Unit Precious Metals Refining    CID001980    BELGIUM    Conformant
Gold    Metalor Technologies (Suzhou) Ltd.    CID001147    CHINA    Conformant
Gold    LS-NIKKO Copper Inc.    CID001078    KOREA, REPUBLIC OF    Conformant
Tantalum    TANIOBIS Co., Ltd.    CID002544    THAILAND    Conformant
Tantalum    TANIOBIS GmbH    CID002545    GERMANY    Conformant
Tantalum    H.C. Starck Inc.    CID002548    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Tantalum    TANIOBIS Japan Co., Ltd.    CID002549    JAPAN    Conformant
Tantalum    TANIOBIS Smelting GmbH & Co. KG    CID002550    GERMANY    Conformant
Tantalum    Ulba Metallurgical Plant JSC    CID001969    KAZAKHSTAN    Conformant
Tantalum    Global Advanced Metals Aizu    CID002558    JAPAN    Conformant
Tantalum    D Block Metals, LLC    CID002504    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Tantalum    Metallurgical Products India Pvt., Ltd.    CID001163    INDIA    Conformant
Tantalum    Global Advanced Metals Boyertown    CID002557    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Tantalum    Jiujiang Tanbre Co., Ltd.    CID000917    CHINA    Conformant
Tantalum    Mitsui Mining and Smelting Co., Ltd.    CID001192    JAPAN    Conformant
Tantalum    Ningxia Orient Tantalum Industry Co., Ltd.    CID001277    CHINA    Conformant
Tantalum    Mineracao Taboca S.A.    CID001175    BRAZIL    Conformant
Tantalum    NPM Silmet AS    CID001200    ESTONIA    Conformant
Tantalum    Yanling Jincheng Tantalum & Niobium Co., Ltd.    CID001522    CHINA    Conformant
Tantalum    Telex Metals    CID001891    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Tantalum    Hengyang King Xing Lifeng New Materials Co., Ltd.    CID002492    CHINA    Conformant
Tantalum    FIR Metals & Resource Ltd.    CID002505    CHINA    Conformant
Tantalum    KEMET de Mexico    CID002539    MEXICO    Conformant
Tantalum    H.C. Starck Hermsdorf GmbH    CID002547    GERMANY    Conformant
Tantalum    Jiangxi Tuohong New Raw Material    CID002842    CHINA    Conformant
Tantalum    F&X Electro-Materials Ltd.    CID000460    CHINA    Conformant
Tantalum    XIMEI RESOURCES (GUANGDONG) LIMITED    CID000616    CHINA    Conformant
Tantalum    JiuJiang JinXin Nonferrous Metals Co., Ltd.    CID000914    CHINA    Conformant
Tantalum    Changsha South Tantalum Niobium Co., Ltd.    CID000211    CHINA    Conformant
Tin    PT Timah Tbk Mentok    CID001482    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    Thaisarco    CID001898    THAILAND    Conformant
Tin    Metallo Belgium N.V.    CID002773    BELGIUM    Conformant
Tin    Yunnan Chengfeng Non-ferrous Metals Co., Ltd.    CID002158    CHINA    Conformant
Tin    Malaysia Smelting Corporation (MSC)    CID001105    MALAYSIA    Conformant
Tin    Mineracao Taboca S.A.    CID001173    BRAZIL    Conformant
Tin    Minsur    CID001182    PERU    Conformant

 

5


Mineral

  

Smelter Name

   Smelter ID   

Country

  

Status

Tin    Operaciones Metalurgicas S.A.    CID001337    BOLIVIA (PLURINATIONAL STATE OF)    Conformant
Tin    PT Timah Tbk Kundur    CID001477    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    Alpha    CID000292    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Tin    Tin Technology & Refining    CID003325    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Tin    PT Refined Bangka Tin    CID001460    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    PT Bangka Serumpun    CID003205    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    White Solder Metalurgia e Mineracao Ltda.    CID002036    BRAZIL    Conformant
Tin    China Tin Group Co., Ltd.    CID001070    CHINA    Conformant
Tin    PT Mitra Stania Prima    CID001453    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    EM Vinto    CID000438    BOLIVIA (PLURINATIONAL STATE OF)    Conformant
Tin    Guangdong Hanhe Non-Ferrous Metal Co., Ltd.    CID003116    CHINA    Conformant
Tin    Tin Smelting Branch of Yunnan Tin Co., Ltd.    CID002180    CHINA    Conformant
Tin    PT ATD Makmur Mandiri Jaya    CID002503    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    PT Artha Cipta Langgeng    CID001399    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    PT Bukit Timah    CID001428    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    PT Sariwiguna Binasentosa    CID001463    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    PT Babel Inti Perkasa    CID001402    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    PT Cipta Persada Mulia    CID002696    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    Luna Smelter, Ltd.    CID003387    RWANDA    Conformant
Tin    Fenix Metals    CID000468    POLAND    Conformant
Tin    PT Stanindo Inti Perkasa    CID001468    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    Mitsubishi Materials Corporation    CID001191    JAPAN    Conformant
Tin    Metallic Resources, Inc.    CID001142    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Tin    Rui Da Hung    CID001539    TAIWAN, PROVINCE OF CHINA    Conformant
Tin    Dowa    CID000402    JAPAN    Conformant
Tin    Jiangxi New Nanshan Technology Ltd.    CID001231    CHINA    Conformant
Tin    Ma’anshan Weitai Tin Co., Ltd.    CID003379    CHINA    Conformant
Tin    Chenzhou Yunxiang Mining and Metallurgy Co., Ltd.    CID000228    CHINA    Conformant
Tin    Gejiu Non-Ferrous Metal Processing Co., Ltd.    CID000538    CHINA    Conformant
Tin    PT Menara Cipta Mulia    CID002835    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    Thai Nguyen Mining and Metallurgy Co., Ltd.    CID002834    VIET NAM    Conformant
Tin    O.M. Manufacturing Philippines, Inc.    CID002517    PHILIPPINES    Conformant
Tin    PT Rajawali Rimba Perkasa    CID003381    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    PT Babel Surya Alam Lestari    CID001406    INDONESIA    Conformant
Tin    O.M. Manufacturing (Thailand) Co., Ltd.    CID001314    THAILAND    Conformant
Tungsten    Ganzhou Seadragon W & Mo Co., Ltd.    CID002494    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Jiangwu H.C. Starck Tungsten Products Co., Ltd.    CID002551    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Chongyi Zhangyuan Tungsten Co., Ltd.    CID000258    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Chenzhou Diamond Tungsten Products Co., Ltd.    CID002513    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Xiamen Tungsten Co., Ltd.    CID002082    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Xiamen Tungsten (H.C.) Co., Ltd.    CID002320    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Ganzhou Huaxing Tungsten Products Co., Ltd.    CID000875    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Global Tungsten & Powders Corp.    CID000568    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Tungsten    H.C. Starck Tungsten GmbH    CID002541    GERMANY    Conformant
Tungsten    TANIOBIS Smelting GmbH & Co. KG    CID002542    GERMANY    Conformant
Tungsten    Jiangxi Gan Bei Tungsten Co., Ltd.    CID002321    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Japan New Metals Co., Ltd.    CID000825    JAPAN    Conformant
Tungsten    Kennametal Huntsville    CID000105    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Tungsten    A.L.M.T. Corp.    CID000004    JAPAN    Conformant
Tungsten    Hunan Chenzhou Mining Co., Ltd.    CID000766    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Guangdong Xianglu Tungsten Co., Ltd.    CID000218    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Wolfram Bergbau und Hutten AG    CID002044    AUSTRIA    Conformant
Tungsten    Jiangxi Yaosheng Tungsten Co., Ltd.    CID002316    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Niagara Refining LLC    CID002589    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    Conformant
Tungsten    Jiangxi Xinsheng Tungsten Industry Co., Ltd.    CID002317    CHINA    Conformant
Tungsten    Masan High-Tech Materials    CID002543    VIET NAM    Conformant
Tungsten    Jiangxi Tonggu Non-ferrous Metallurgical & Chemical Co., Ltd.    CID002318    CHINA    Conformant

 

6


Future Steps to Improve Due Diligence

We have communicated our expectations to our contract manufacturers regarding our commitment to sourcing minerals for our products in a manner that does not finance or benefit armed groups in the Covered Countries. We plan to continue our inquiry method and utilize the CMRT to collect and report on due diligence activities with our supply base. We continue to work with our suppliers to improve the quality and completeness of information collected by using the most updated CMRT form. We will continue to review our supplier responses, provide feedback as necessary, encourage our suppliers to remain committed to conflict-free sources and engage with our relevant suppliers in order to build their knowledge and capacity so they are able to provide us with complete and accurate information on the source and chain of custody of Conflict Minerals in our supply chain.

Conclusion

Based on our due diligence efforts and subject to the limitations of such efforts as detailed above, we conclude the Conflict Minerals contained in our Covered Products come from suppliers using smelters or refiners listed as conformant by RMI.

Additional Risk Factors

The statements above are based on the RCOI process and due diligence performed in good faith by Rambus. These statements are based on the infrastructure and information available at the time. A number of factors could introduce errors or otherwise affect our Conflict Minerals status. These factors include, but are not limited to, gaps in supplier data, gaps in smelter data, errors or omissions by suppliers, errors or omissions by smelters, smelter classifications, all instances of Conflict Minerals necessary to the functionality or manufacturing of our products possibly not yet having been identified, gaps in supplier education and knowledge, timeliness of data, public information not discovered during a reasonable search, errors in public data, language barriers and translation, supplier and smelter unfamiliarity with the protocol, oversights or errors in conflict free smelter audits, Covered Countries sourced materials being declared secondary materials, companies going out of business, certification programs being not equally advanced for all industry segments and metals, and smuggling of Conflict Minerals from the Covered Countries to countries beyond the Covered Countries.

Forward-looking Statements

This Conflict Minerals Report contains forward-looking statements. These statements include statements regarding steps we intend to examine to further mitigate risk. We also use words such as “believe,” “expect,” “future,” “intend” and similar expressions to identify forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements involve risk and uncertainty. When considering these statements, you should also consider the important factors described in this Conflict Minerals Report under the heading “Additional Risk Factors” and in the reports and documents we file from time to time with the SEC, including the factors described under the sections titled “Risk Factors” in our most recently submitted Annual and Quarterly Reports on Forms 10-K and 10-Q, respectively. Except as required by law, we disclaim any obligation to update information contained in these forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.

 

7