The Niagara Falls Review

Huawei expects no relief from U.S.

Chinese tech giant developing its own technology: founder

- JOE MCDONALD

SHENZHEN, CHINA — The founder of Chinese tech giant Huawei said Tuesday he expects no relief from U.S. export curbs because of the political climate in Washington but expressed confidence the company will thrive because it is developing its own technology.

Ren Zhengfei also said he doesn’t want relief from U.S. sanctions if it requires China to make concession­s in a tariff war — even if that means his daughter, who is under house arrest in Vancouver awaiting an extraditio­n hearing over U.S. criminal charges, faces a longer legal struggle.

In an interview with The Associated Press at Huawei’s sprawling, leafy headquarte­rs campus in the southern city of Shenzhen, the 74-year-old Ren said Huawei expects U.S. curbs on most technology sales to go ahead, despite Monday’s announceme­nt of a second 90-day delay. He said no one in Washington would risk standing up for the company.

The biggest impact will be on U.S. vendors that sell chips and other components to Huawei, the biggest maker of network gear for phone companies, he said.

Washington has placed Huawei on an “entity list” of foreign companies that require official permission to buy American technology.

“Whether the ‘entity list’ is extended or not, that will not have a substantia­l impact on Huawei’s business,” Ren said. “We can do well without relying on American companies.”

Huawei Technologi­es Ltd., China’s first global tech brand, is at the centre of a battle over trade and technology that threatens to tip the global economy into recession. U.S. officials accuse the company, also the No. 2 global smartphone brand, of stealing technology and facilitati­ng Chinese spying. Huawei denies those accusation­s.

Huawei’s chief financial officer, Meng Wanzhou, who is also Ren’s daughter, is fighting extraditio­n from Canada to face U.S. charges related to possible violations of trade sanctions on Iran. Beijing arrested two Canadians last December in a possible attempt to force her release.

Ren looked relaxed and confident throughout the two-hour interview at a palatial new building in neoclassic­al European style where Huawei entertains customers. The atmosphere was a striking contrast from a June 17 news conference at which Ren compared the company to a “badly damaged airplane” and warned that U.S. sanctions would cut Huawei’s projected smartphone sales by $30 billion over the next two years.

U.S. President Donald Trump has suggested controls on Huawei might be lifted if Beijing agrees to a deal on trade and technology disputes that led to U.S. tariff hikes on Chinese imports.

Ren rejected that. He said Huawei couldn’t ask for favours that might hurt the interests of China’s poor majority.

“I couldn’t take it if those poor people sacrificed their own interests for the benefit of Huawei,” Ren said. “Maybe my daughter will suffer more. But I would rather do that instead of having the poorer people in China sacrifice for Huawei’s survival and developmen­t.”

The May announceme­nt of export curbs prompted warnings that sales of Huawei smartphone­s and other products that use U.S. chips and other technology could be devastated. The curbs also mean a loss of billions of dollars in potential annual sales for U.S. vendors.

Even before the announceme­nt, Huawei was working on developing its own chips, software and other technology that might reduce reliance on U.S. vendors. The company spent $15 billion last year on research and developmen­t, more than Apple Inc. or Microsoft Corp.

Huawei reported that sales in the six months through June rose 23.2 per cent over a year earlier. Its chair, Liang Hua, said in July that Huawei was reviewing its core products to ensure they all could be delivered to customers without U.S. components.

“At a strategic level, the U.S. entity list is helpful to Huawei,” Ren said, noting the company has responded by eliminatin­g “marginal, unimportan­t businesses or products” and focusing resources on “major products.”

“The whole company can focus more on our most competitiv­e products,” he said.

This month, Huawei unveiled its own smartphone operating system to replace the popular Android system from Alphabet Inc.’s Google. Huawei’s phones still use Android, but Google is blocked from supporting maps, music and other services.

Earlier this year, Huawei released its own chip for next-generation smartphone­s and the first phone based on that chip.

Ren rarely appeared in public or talked to reporters before his daughter’s December arrest. Since then, however, he has given a flurry of interviews to foreign reporters in an effort to repair the company’s reputation. “I think it’s working,” he said. Asked about ongoing pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, which borders Shenzhen, Ren said the violence was “not good for society and the people” but doesn’t affect Huawei.

“There is no impact at all on Huawei’s business,” he said. “We are still focused on our own production. We still focus on fixing the holes in our bullet-riddled airplane.”

Ren, who has called himself a fan of the United States and publicly praised Trump as a leader, said Huawei wants to retain technology collaborat­ion with Google, Microsoft and other U.S. developers. He said a strong market position for Huawei will help U.S. companies because Huawei’s products use U.S. technology.

If Huawei is blocked from using Android and is forced to develop alternativ­e systems, “it wouldn’t be in the best interests of the United States,” Ren said.

Even if Huawei develops its own alternativ­es, he said, it is willing to buy U.S. components to support industry developmen­t.

“We hope we can and we will continue to be able to buy American components,” he said. “Even though we may have the ability to turn out our own components or products, we would choose to reduce our own capacity so as to use more American components in order to contribute together to share the prosperity of society.”

Ren said Huawei is planning as if the U.S. export restrictio­ns will remain in place.

“It isn’t possible that someone in the United States will step up to revoke the entity list designatio­n,” he said. “Right now, attacking Huawei in the United States is politicall­y correct, while helping Huawei even once would put them under significan­t pressure. So to us, the entity list will be there for quite some time.”

 ?? NG HAN GUAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei during an interview at the company’s campus in Shenzhen, China, on Tuesday.
NG HAN GUAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei during an interview at the company’s campus in Shenzhen, China, on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada