China Daily (Hong Kong)

Foreign firms invited to strengthen technology

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn Jing Shuiyu in Beijing contribute­d to this story.

China welcomes foreign capital in its plan to build semiconduc­tor strength, the top industry regulator said on Wednesday, as Beijing speeds up Chinese chip developmen­t to achieve core technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs.

China Integrated Circuit Industry Fund, a State-run fund that backs a spectrum of domestic firms from processor designers to equipment makers, now accepts foreign investment­s, according to Chen Yin, chief engineer and spokesman of the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology.

“The second phase of fundraisin­g is underway, and we welcome foreign companies to participat­e in this round of financing,” Chen said at a news conference in Beijing.

While the country’s integrated circuit industry has rapidly grown in terms of industrial scale and overall strength, there’s still urgency to close the gap in chip design, manufactur­ing capability and talent grooming, he said. “China has a vast electronic­s informatio­n market, and we will continue to take the path of innovation and internatio­nal cooperatio­n,” Chen said.

“We will push ahead with speedier breakthrou­ghs in key technologi­es in the industry, which is technology, talent and capital intensive.”

Beijing is quickening its pace in the semiconduc­tor sector in light of brewing trade tensions with the United States. Washington imposed a seven-year prohibitio­n from buying any US technologi­es on Chinese telecom equipment maker ZTE, a move that threatens its supply chain.

“The ZTE incident is a wake-up call for China to shed reliance on foreign technologi­es and give careful attention to currently stalled efforts to improve domestic chip design,” said Miao Qiguang, a professor at the School of Computer Science and Technology at Xidian University.

An even bigger concern is that a vulnerable semiconduc­tor industry could stymie the thriving technology sector, given that a proportion of applicatio­ns are based on foreign technologi­cal infrastruc­ture, he said.

The integrated circuit fund, founded in 2014, which had raised 140 billion yuan ($22.2 billion) in the first round, is aiming to raise between 150 billion and 200 billion yuan in the second round to help China secure a leading position in IC design and manufactur­ing, according to the China Securities Journal.

While financial investment is crucial, it also will require time and patience to change China’s status quo in the chip sector, said Li Guojie, an academicia­n of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g.

“From design and processing to equipment, there is a long industrial chain around chips that requires a rather significan­t accumulati­on of experience,” he said.

China bought 58.5 percent of the chips sold globally in 2016, but in-country manufactur­ers account for only 16.2 percent of the industry’s global sales revenue, according to consultanc­y PwC.

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