Chinese chip manufacturing remains largely unaffected by US trade restrictions

Chinese chip manufacturing remains largely unaffected by US trade restrictions

China ‍is stockpiling​ chipmaking equipment despite the US government’s trade⁣ restrictions on the export of semiconductor manufacturing equipment to the ‍country.

Some of the leading ⁤producers of chip ​manufacturing technology have almost doubled the⁢ percentage of revenue⁢ they’ve​ generated from⁤ China since 2022, according to⁤ a report from Bloomberg.

Applied Materials,⁢ a California-based company‍ that supplies equipment, services and ⁤software for the manufacture of semiconductors,⁤ reported‌ that 44% of revenue generated in ⁢the fourth ‌quarter of ‌its fiscal year⁣ 2023 came ⁣from China, compared⁣ to just under 20% in the same quarter of 2022.

Lam Research, another California company that provides wafer fabrication equipment and services, saw⁣ revenue from ⁤China hit 48.5% in ⁤September 2023, up from​ 30% in September 2022.

However, ⁣in ⁣a ⁤sign that ​the US government‌ is taking a no-nonsense approach to enforcing ⁤its export ⁣restrictions, on⁣ the same day⁢ Applied Materials published its earnings, it​ was reported⁤ that the US Justice Department was launching a ⁣criminal investigation into the organization for purportedly evading export restrictions.

The company allegedly sent hundreds of millions‌ of dollars ⁤worth of ‌equipment to Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC),‌ via South Korea and without an⁢ export license, Reuters ‍reported, citing a number of unnamed sources.

Chinese companies continue to exploit restriction loopholes

The accusations levelled against Applied ⁣Materials are⁤ not the only​ way China has ⁣seemingly been⁣ able to navigate its ways around the trade⁣ restrictions.

According to its annual report released earlier this week, the ⁢US-China Economic⁤ and Security Review Commission found that Chinese companies are ⁤routinely able ‍to bypass the restrictions — which have been placed on chipmaking equipment ⁣that can manufacture advanced chips⁢ at the 14 nanometer node or below⁤ — by claiming the technology they’re ‍purchasing is being used on⁣ older ⁣production lines.

“With limited capacity for​ end-use inspections, it is difficult to verify the equipment is not being ​used to ​produce more‍ advanced chips,” the⁢ report said.

Suspicions were first raised earlier this ​year when it was​ revealed that Chinese⁢ telecoms giant⁢ Huawei had produced a smartphone containing an advanced 7 nanometer chip.

The Huawei Mate Pro 60 contains Kirin 9000s⁤ chips — 7‌ nanometer chips that have been made in China⁣ by the⁢ partly state-owned SMIC, according to‌ an analysis published by TechInsights, ⁢a semiconductor research and analysis organization.

SMIC was barred by the US from obtaining the machines necessary ⁤for ⁤the production of 7nm ‍chips in late 2020⁤ and to ‌date, the ‌most advanced chip SMIC had been known to manufacture was a larger-scale 14nm semiconductor.

An⁣ investigation by theUS Department of ‍Commerce into how​ SMIC got hold of the ⁣technology is currently under…

2023-11-20 02:41:02
Post ⁢from⁢ www.computerworld.com ⁣ rnrn

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