US targets China's top chipmaking plant after Huawei Mate 60 Pro,
sources say
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[February 21, 2024] By
Alexandra Alper and Karen Freifeld
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Biden administration is turning up the heat
on China's top sanctioned chipmaker by cutting off its most advanced
factory from more American imports after it produced a sophisticated
chip for Huawei's Mate 60 Pro phone, three people familiar with the
matter said.
Late last year, the Commerce Department sent dozens of letters to U.S.
suppliers to Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC),
suspending permission to sell to its most advanced plant, said two
people familiar with the matter who requested anonymity because they
were not authorized to speak publicly about the matter.
While many companies had already stopped selling to SMIC South, as the
unit is known, the letters halted millions of dollars worth of shipments
of chipmaking materials and parts from at least one supplier, Entegris,
one of the people said.
Reuters found no evidence that Entegris had violated any U.S. laws or
regulations.
Entegris said it made the shipments in accordance with a valid export
license and halted them after receiving letters from the Commerce
Department suspending permission to send products to SMIC South.
The Massachusetts-based company, which produces filters, gases,
chemicals, and products for handling wafers, the building blocks for
making chips, said it monitors and complies with the "rapidly evolving
regulatory requirements" for international trade affecting the chip
industry.
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SMIC did not respond to a request for comment. Huawei, the White House
and the Commerce Department declined to comment.
"This is out-and-out economic bullying and will inevitably backfire,"
said a spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington. "We urge the
U.S. side to stop overstretching the concept of national security and
abusing the state power to suppress Chinese companies.
The license suspensions by the Commerce Department, first reported by
Reuters, show the Biden administration has taken action against SMIC
amid rising pressure from Republican China hawks to stem the flow of
U.S. technology to the company and degrade its ability to make
sophisticated chips.
That pressure has built since August, when sanctioned Chinese telecoms
giant Huawei shocked the world with a new phone powered by a
sophisticated chip. The Huawei Mate 60 Pro was seen as a symbol of the
China's technological resurgence despite Washington's ongoing efforts to
cripple its capacity to produce advanced semiconductors.
The phone also prompted a review by the Biden administration to learn
the details behind the chip that powers it, the most advanced
semiconductor China has so far produced.
Critics say the round of letters don't go far enough. Republican
Congressman Michael McCaul, who chairs the Foreign Affairs Committee,
said the Commerce Department should have acted sooner. "This was
negligent work by [the agency] and casts further doubt on its ability to
fulfill its national security mission," he added in a statement to
Reuters this month.
Commerce declined to comment on McCaul's allegations of negligence.
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![](../images/022124PIX/busine52.jpg)
Semiconductor chips are seen on a printed circuit board in this
illustration picture taken February 17, 2023. REUTERS/Florence
Lo/Illustration//File Photo
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RISING RESTRICTIONS
The United States has charted a slow course towards depriving SMIC
and Huawei of access to advanced U.S. technology.
Huawei was added to a trade restrictions list in 2019 by the Trump
administration over alleged sanctions violations. SMIC was added to
the same list in 2020 for alleged ties to the Chinese military
industrial complex. Both companies have previously denied
wrongdoing.
Being added to that list usually bars U.S. companies from selling to
the targeted firms, but Trump gave the green light to shipments of
certain items to Huawei and SMIC, allowing billions of dollars in
U.S. goods to flow to them over the last few years.
The Biden administration unveiled new rules in October, 2022, which
effectively banned U.S. suppliers from sending semiconductor tools
and materials to advanced Chinese-run chipmaking factories in China
including SMIC South. But U.S. rules allowed companies with
preexisting licenses -- which generally are valid for four years --
to keep supplying the facility.
Entegris shipped chipmaking parts and materials to SMIC South
between October 2022 and the end of last year, a person familiar
with the matter said.
China accounted for 16% of Entegris' $180 million in sales last
year, the company said in its 2023 annual report, noting that recent
U.S. export regulations “have reduced our ability to sell our
products in China and it is possible future regulation could further
reduce demand for our products.”
Lita Shon-Roy, CEO of market research firm Techcet, said SMIC South
could likely turn to Chinese, Taiwanese, Japanese and Korean sources
for most chemicals and parts used in the chipmaking process.
However, if SMIC’s top facility “saw its United States supply chain
suddenly cut off, that could potentially interrupt their production
for 3 to 9 months depending on inventories,” she said. She noted it
would take time to find and conduct rigorous testing of new
suppliers unless SMIC South had done so in advance.
Experts assert that SMIC South is the only SMIC factory with the
capability of making the Mate 60's 7 nanometer chip. Analysis firm
Techsights also said in September a teardown of the phone revealed
SMIC built the advanced processor to power it.
"I don't think there's any doubt that it's that [factory]," said
Doug Fuller, a chip industry expert with the Copenhagen Business
School.
Reuters reported in December how a chip designer part-owned by SMIC
still enjoys access to state-of-the art U.S. chip design software.
(Reporting by Alexandra Alper; editing by Chris Sanders and Anna
Driver)
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