(Source: Business Wire)

Corning Incorporated (NYSE: GLW) announced today that its LCD glass
manufacturing facility in Taichung, Taiwan, experienced a power
disruption over the weekend that affected some of its glass-making
operations. The company said that although it will be several days
before the full extent is known, the disruption is expected to have a
material impact on glass volume in the fourth quarter.
"The majority of our Taichung glass production continues to operate
normally," James B. Flaws, vice chairman and chief financial officer,
said. "However the power disruption caused the shutdown of several of
our glass melting tanks. We are in the process of determining how much
glass melting capacity was affected, the time to repair the tanks, and
the impact on our glass volume available for customers."
Corning said its preliminary assessment of the impact is that
fourth-quarter glass volume now could be flat to down slightly
sequentially. Without the power disruption, the company said it believes
quarterly glass volume would have increased by as much as 5%.
Flaws said, "We are doing everything possible to accelerate repairs and
leverage our worldwide supply chain to secure additional glass supply."
Corning will provide more detail on the impact of the Taichung power
disruption to glass production when it releases third-quarter financial
results on Monday, October 26.
Forward-Looking and Cautionary Statements
This press release contains "forward-looking statements" (within the
meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995), which
are based on current expectations and assumptions about Corning's
financial results and business operations, that involve substantial
risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ
materially. These risks and uncertainties include: the effect of global
political, economic and business conditions;conditions in thefinancial
and credit markets;currency fluctuations;tax rates; product demand and
industry capacity; competition; reliance on a concentrated customer
base; manufacturing efficiencies; cost reductions; availability of
critical components and materials; new product
commercialization;pricing fluctuationsandchanges in the mix of sales
between premium and non-premium products;new plant start-upor
restructuringcosts; possible disruption in commercial activities due to
terrorist activity, armed conflict, political instability or major
health concerns; adequacy of insurance; equity company activities;
acquisition and divestiture activities; the level of excess or obsolete
inventory; the rate of technology change; the ability to enforce
patents; product and components performance issues; stock price
fluctuations; and adverse litigation or regulatory developments.These
and otherrisk factors aredetailedin Corning's filings with the
Securities and Exchange Commission.Forward-looking statements speak
only as of the day that they are made, and Corning undertakes no
obligation to update them in light of new information or future events.
About Corning Incorporated
Corning Incorporated (www.corning.com)
is the world leader in specialty glass and ceramics. Drawing on more
than 150 years of materials science and process engineering knowledge,
Corning creates and makes keystone components that enable
high-technology systems for consumer electronics, mobile emissions
control, telecommunications and life sciences. Our products include
glass substrates for LCD televisions, computer monitors and laptops;
ceramic substrates and filters for mobile emission control systems;
optical fiber, cable, hardware & equipment for telecommunications
networks; optical biosensors for drug discovery; and other advanced
optics and specialty glass solutions for a number of industries
including semiconductor, aerospace, defense, astronomy and metrology.
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