China Daily

Domestic tech firms step up efforts on chip production

- By SHI JING in Shanghai shijing@chinadaily.com.cn

In response to the country’s increasing stress on internet and informatio­n security, domestic companies have sped up their research and developmen­t of independen­tly produced and controllab­le chips.

Shanghai Zhaoxin Semiconduc­tor Co Ltd released its independen­tly developed and produced generalpur­pose central processing unit KX5000 at the end of December 2017. It is the first domestical­ly produced CPU supporting dual-channel DDR 4 memory, which has been widely adopted by the world’s leading manufactur­ers such as Intel and ADM for their new products this year.

The company says the KX-5000 series octuple-core processor has a similar performanc­e to that of Intel’s Core i3-6100 processor.

Founded in 2013, Zhaoxin began mass production in 2016. Last year, as many as 30,000 Zhaoxin chips were sold and the goal for 2018 is a maximum 200,000 chips. At present, local government department­s and a number of domestic companies in Shanghai have purchased computers installed with Zhaoxin chips. The large office computer market in China is the long-term target for Zhaoxin, according to the company’s Chairman Ye Jun.

Zhaoxin is the first and only Chinese company that has grasped the three key technologi­es in chip production — CPU, graphics processing unit and chipset.

Ye said such technologi­es are of great importance in terms of China’s informatio­n security and industrial security. It is especially imminent since the industry leader Intel has been reported at the beginning of this year to have two major bugs that might allow sensitive data such as passwords to be stolen, he said.

Ye also stressed that less reliance on imported chips will secure the production of Chinese manufactur­ing companies. Shenzhen-based telecom company ZTE halted trading in early March last year because the central government of the United States banned it from importing US chips. Consequent­ly, its production was dramatical­ly affected.

According to Wei Shaojun, professor of Institute of Microelect­ronics at Tsinghua University, the value of imported integrated circuit products hit a record high in China last year to reach $250 bil- lion. Integrated circuits have become the product with the highest import value in the country, overtaking crude oil. Among the $250 billion, the majority has been spent on CPUs.

Meanwhile, the world’s CPU market has been dominated by the two US giants — Intel and AMD — with Intel taking up the majority 86 percent and AMD accounting for 13 percent, according to market consultanc­y Mercury Research.

“Our goal is to become the world’s third-largest CPU manufactur­er,” Ye said. “We have already made the first moves, which is like making the first crack on an iron plate.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong