The epoch times

US Commerce Dept. pledges to safeguard national security amidst Huawei chip advancement.

The U.S. Department of Commerce is determined to safeguard national security following China’s reported ⁢breakthrough in manufacturing a 7-nanometer chip without access to advanced equipment.

“Let’s be clear: export controls are just one tool in the U.S. government’s toolbox to address the national security ⁣threats presented by the PRC. The restrictions in place since 2019 have knocked Huawei down and forced it⁣ to reinvent itself—at a substantial cost to the PRC government,” a Commerce Department spokesperson told The Epoch Times in an emailed statement, using​ the‍ acronym ‌for the regime’s official name,‍ the People’s Republic of China.

The spokesperson added that the⁤ department is working on obtaining the “character and composition” of the purported 7-nanometer chip.

“We are continually working to assess and, when appropriate, update our controls based on the ‌dynamic threat environment, and we will not hesitate to take appropriate action to protect U.S. national security,” the spokesperson‍ said.

During Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo’s visit to China last week, Huawei Technologies Co. launched a new smartphone model. Although Huawei has been mum about technical specs,⁤ teardowns by research‍ firm TechInsights confirmed that Huawei’s Mate 60 Pro‌ uses a 7-nm chip made by state-backed ‌Semiconductor Manufacturing International‍ Corporation (SMIC), China’s largest chip maker.

China hailed Huawei’s latest move as a “triumphant return” and a‌ defeat of U.S. export controls.

A chip by ‍Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) is ‌seen at the 2020 World Semiconductor Conference in Nanjing in China’s eastern Jiangsu province on August 26, 2020. (Photo by STR / AFP) / China OUT (Photo⁤ by​ STR/AFP via Getty Images)

A Blow to the US?

⁤ Since the Trump administration, the United States ⁤has sought to curb China’s access to‍ advanced chip manufacturing capabilities, a key driver for Chinese communist leader Xi Jinping’s plans for military and economic ⁤dominance.

News of China’s success at the 7-nanometer level, an indicator of computing power, has been considered by some as a‌ shock and heavy blow to the United‍ States.

But others say the fanfare is overrated. After​ all, China broke the ‍7-nanometer barrier five years‌ after the global leader, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC). TSMC has achieved⁢ mass production of 3-nanometer chips—the world’s most advanced chip. The new iPhone 15 to be released later this month is widely expected to be the first adopter of this chip.

Ray Yang, a semiconductor industry veteran and a director at the Industrial Technology Research Institute ‌(ITRI), ​an influential think tank in Taiwan, is one of them.

While a 7-nanometer chip is a milestone achievement, without access to advanced equipment‍ and process technology, Huawei’s development will stall, Mr. Yang ​told The Epoch Times.

He said that new developments will keep ⁣happening as Apple and Huawei’s domestic competitors​ using American Qualcomm chips progress to faster⁤ and more powerful chips.

“But Huawei will stop at 7-nanometer. There’s no hope of any progression,” he said.

China found a replacement for a blocked technology, said James Lewis, the director of the Technology and Public Policy Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank. This is a ⁢natural response to export controls, he said, and it doesn’t mean that U.S. export controls ‌have failed.

“They are not realizing that ‌ [export controls] have a shelf life,” Mr. Lewis told The Epoch Times, referring to those opining that⁢ Huawei’s new chip represents a blow to‍ U.S. efforts⁣ to block the technology.

“Export controls are really effective for the first couple of years. And then people figure out how to get around them.” He⁣ likened the dynamic to that of a tennis game.

In this case, ‌he said Huawei was quick ⁢to hit the ball back. “Given how interconnected the economies are, life is much shorter than it used to be.”

Employees are seen working on the final assembly of ASML’s TWINSCAN‌ NXE:3400B semiconductor lithography tool with its panels removed, in Veldhoven, Netherlands, on April 4, 2019. (Bart van Overbeeke Fotografie/ASML/Handout via Reuters)

Intellectual Property Theft Suspected

⁢ China making 7-nanometer‌ chips is not new. In July 2022, SMIC manufactured 7-nanometer​ Bitcoin mining chips. The latest smartphone chip is more sophisticated than that.

Mr. Yang believes that SMIC used a deep ultraviolet (DUV) lithography chipmaking machine, which was not under export controls until this year and is‌ capable of making 7-nanometer chips, to make the chip for Huawei.

As the⁣ principal investigator of a semiconductor cross-disciplinary group for Taiwan’s chief science agency, Mr. ⁣Yang ⁤follows⁣ global ⁣patents closely.

He highly suspects that some intellectual⁤ property infringement was involved in‌ the process technology SMIC ​used ⁢to produce ⁤the 7-nanometer chip. One way to verify this theory, he said, is to see whether Huawei would export its new smartphone model to Europe and the United States. If the technology was stolen and Huawei were to export the new phone, it would incur significant legal risks.

Mr.⁤ Lewis also ⁢said he wouldn’t be surprised if SMIC achieved the latest 7-nanometer chips through industrial espionage.

“China ⁣is very aggressive‍ in its spying, and they are probably the most aggressive in the world when it comes to stealing technology,” he said. “So [it’s] not a complete surprise.”

Nowhere to Go

Without access to extreme ultraviolet lithography⁣ (EUV) machines, the​ world’s most advanced chip-making⁤ equipment manufactured ⁤exclusively by ASML, China’s next step to 5-nanometer chips will be much more difficult.​ The export of this technology to China has been restricted since 2019.

Mr. Yang said the Chinese Communist⁣ Party (CCP) will continue to ‌try to manufacture 5-nanometer and 3-nanometer chips with DUV ‍equipment, as their access to the higher-grade ‍EUV systems is blocked.

The expert likened the chip race ‌to a mountaineering race. Those with advanced oxygen tanks, tents, and ‍other equipment can​ safely reach the summit and return. ‍The ⁣success rate‍ for those ​without proper equipment would be much lower,⁢ making the exercise commercially unsustainable.

According‌ to him, the yield rate—the proportion of quality ‌chips out⁣ of all chips cut from⁤ a silicon wafer—for DUV-made 5-nanometer chips could be as low as 10 to 20 percent. The yield rate for DUV-made 3-nanometer chips might be zero.

But such low yield rates​ won’t deter the CCP, given its thirst for advanced chips for military applications. Mr. Yang expects the regime to continue ‍to try to manufacture 5-nanometer chips, which are necessary for a range of military technology, including fighter jet⁣ com



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