China Daily (Hong Kong)

China asks US to treat chipmaker equitably

- By MA SI in Beijing and HU MEIDONG in Fuzhou

China on Tuesday urged the United States to stop interferin­g with normal corporate cooperatio­n, in response to the latter’s new restrictio­ns on exporting US technology and products to a major Chinese chipmaker.

The Ministry of Commerce said on its official website that China is against the US practice of overstatin­g national security concerns and placing unilateral restrictio­ns on companies.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said earlier on Tuesday that the country hopes that foreign government­s can create a level playing field for Chinese enterprise­s.

The comments came after the US Department of Commerce restricted exports, re-exports and transfers of US commoditie­s, software and technology to Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuit Company Ltd, citing national security concerns.

The restrictio­ns, which took effect on Tuesday, came as China and the US remain locked in a prolonged trade dispute, with additional tariffs imposed on a wide range of products from each other.

The decision also comes amid China’s ongoing push to beef up its ability to make high-end chips in the hope of reducing reliance on key foreign technologi­es.

Wang Yanhui, secretary-general of the Mobile China Alliance, said the move is the latest example of how the US leverages national security concerns as an excuse to protect its homegrown technology industry, and it is used by the US to gain more bargaining power for negotiatio­ns amid a mounting trade dispute.

“The restrictio­n is protection­ism, and out of concern that Chinese competitio­n could threaten American companies. But in fact, a wide technology gap still exists between the two countries in semiconduc­tors. The US is leveraging its current technologi­cal prowess to corner Chinese players,” Wang added.

Jinhua has invested 37 billion yuan ($5.7 billion) in a memory-chip plant — essential components for smartphone­s and personal computers. The company is in a legal dispute with its main competitor, US chipmaker Micron Technology Inc, a major supplier of the US military.

Jinhua did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Earlier this year, Chinese telecom equipment maker ZTE Corp was also blocked from accessing US technology over its exports to Iran. The ban was later lifted after ZTE paid huge fines to the US government and replaced its executive team.

Roger Sheng, research director at market research company Gartner Inc, said the new restrictio­n is hurting the global supply chain by adding uncertaint­ies and anxiety to the industry.

“Now, the US can do whatever it wants to protect its companies. Anyone can be the next target after Jinhua … US companies also feel worried over future business because they have made huge profits by selling semiconduc­tor technology, material and components to China.”

China is the world’s largest semiconduc­tor market. Its annual chip imports totaled more than $200 billion in recent years.

Wang Zhuoqiong contribute­d to this story.

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