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US aims to hobble China's chip industry with sweeping new export rules

The raft of measures could amount to the biggest shift in U.S. policy toward shipping technology to China since the 1990s

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Photo: Reuters
Reuters
4 min read Last Updated : Oct 07 2022 | 11:14 PM IST
The Biden administration on Friday published a sweeping set of export controls, including a measure to cut China off from certain semiconductor chips made anywhere in the world with U.S. tools, vastly expanding its reach in its bid to slow Beijing's technological and military advances.
 
The rules, some of which go into effect immediately, build on restrictions sent in letters earlier this year to top toolmakers KLA Corp, Lam Research Corp and Applied Materials Inc, effectively requiring them to halt shipments of equipment to wholly Chinese-owned factories producing advanced logic chips.
 
The raft of measures could amount to the biggest shift in U.S. policy toward shipping technology to China since the 1990s.
If effective, they could set China's chip manufacturing industry back years by forcing American and foreign companies that use U.S. technology to cut off support for some of China's leading factories and chip designers.
 
In a briefing with reporters on Thursday previewing the rules, senior government officials said many of the measures sought to prevent foreign firms from selling advanced chips to China or supplying Chinese firms with tools to make their own advanced chips. They conceded, however, that they have not yet secured any promises that allied nations will implement similar measures and that discussions with those nations are ongoing.
 
"We recognize that the unilateral controls we're putting into place will lose effectiveness over time if other countries don't join us," one official said. "And we risk harming U.S. technology leadership if foreign competitors are not subject to similar controls."

The expansion of U.S. powers to control exports to China of chips made with U.S. tools is based on a broadening of the so-called foreign direct product rule. It was previously expanded to give the U.S. government authority to control exports of chips made overseas to Chinese telecoms giant Huawei Technologies Co Ltd and later to stop the flow of semiconductors to Russia after its invasion of Ukraine.
 
On Friday, the Biden administration applied the expanded restrictions to China's IFLYTEK, Dahua Technology, and Megvii Technology, companies added to the entity list in 2019 over allegations they aided Beijing in the suppression of its Uyghur minority group.
 
The rules published on Friday also block shipments of a broad array of chips for use in Chinese supercomputing systems.
The rules define a supercomputer as any system with more than 100 petaflops of computing power within a floor space of 6,400 square feet, a definition that two industry sources said could also hit some commercial data centers at Chinese tech giants.
 
U.S. Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer welcomed the announcement, arguing the rules would "protect our country's innovations from China's predatory actions." The Semiconductor Industry Association, which represents chipmakers, said it was studying the regulations and urged the United States to "implement the rules in a targeted way - and in collaboration with international partners - to help level the playing field."
 
Earlier on Friday, the United States added China's top memory chipmaker YMTC and 30 other Chinese entities to a list of companies that U.S. officials cannot inspect, ratcheting up tensions with Beijing and taking aim at a firm that has long troubled the Biden administration.
 
The "unverified list" is a potential precursor to tougher economic blacklists, but companies that comply with U.S.
inspection rules can come off the list. On Friday, U.S.
 
officials removed nine such firms, including a unit of China's Wuxi Biologics, which makes ingredients for AstraZeneca Plc's COVID-19 vaccine.
 
The new regulations will also severely restrict export of U.S. equipment to Chinese memory chip makers and formalize letters sent to Nvidia Corp and Advanced Micro Devices Inc (AMD) restricting shipments to China of chips used in supercomputing systems that nations around the world rely on to develop nuclear weapons and other military technologies.
 
Reuters was first to report key details of the new restrictions on memory chip makers, including a reprieve for foreign companies operating in China and the moves to broaden restrictions on shipments to China of technologies from KLA, Lam, Applied Materials, Nvidia and AMD.
 
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco and Karen Freifeld in New York Additional reporting by David Shepardson in Washington Editing by Alexandra Alper, Chris Sanders and Matthew Lewis)

Topics :United StatesUS Chinasemiconductor industry