Global Times

US sanctions’ impact varies

Nuctech says no effect, SMIC sees large influence

- By Xie Jun

Shortly after the US government imposed new sanctions on dozens of Chinese companies on Friday, one Chinese mainland- based company said that the move will have no impact on current or future operations, while another said that it is still selling products in the US while waiting to see how the restrictio­ns are enforced.

The former company, Beijingbas­ed inspection and security solutions and service provider Nuctech Co, said news of the US move to put it on a fresh blacklist comes as a “surprise”, as the company does not have any radiation detection systems in the US and has never had any complaints about the performanc­e of similar solutions in any market that it serves.

“We want to reassure our customers that this will have no impact on ( our) current or future operations, and we are committed to working with relevant authoritie­s to better understand why Nuctech was included on this list,” Nuctech said in a statement it sent to the Global Times on Sunday.

A public relations representa­tive at dronemaker DJI confirmed to the Global Times that its products can still be sold in the US, but it’s hard to tell what other impact the sanctions will have.

“The blacklist is different from previous sanctions, and we need a few more days to see how they are going to restrict us exactly,” the person said.

Chinese mainland chipmaker Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp ( SMIC) issued a public statement after the sanctions, saying that the move will not have a major negative impact on the company’s business operations and financial status in the short term., but it will have a “significan­t bad influence” on research and developmen­t, as well as capacity constructi­on for advanced chips below 10 nanometers.

SMIC said it would continue to communicat­e with relevant US government department­s and take all possible measures to seek solutions and minimize the negative influence.

SMIC, Nuctech and DJI are three of approximat­ely 60 mainland companies that were placed by the US government on a trade blacklist on Friday as the Trump administra­tion ratchets up tensions with China in President Donald Trump’s final weeks in office, according to media reports.

The US government claimed that the companies have been acting “contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the US,” but it didn’t elaborate on the exact proof of such allegation­s.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a separate release that the country will use “all countermea­sures available” to prevent Chinese companies and institutio­ns from exploiting US goods and technologi­es for “malign purposes.”

The exact influence of those sanctions on Chinese businesses will take more time to emerge and might differ from industry to industry, The sanctions may force domestic companies to make reforms that will make them stronger in the long run, industry practition­ers and experts said.

For SMIC, for example, the blacklist would make it even harder for the company to import high- end mask aligners, which it used to buy from Dutch company ASML but has already been thwarted by the US government, telecom expert Xiang Ligang told the Global Times on Sunday.

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