The Guardian (USA)

US bans ‘advanced tech’ firms from building facilities in China for a decade

- Joanna Partridge

US technology firms that receive government funding will be banned from building “advanced technology facilities” in China for a decade, the Biden administra­tion has announced, as it outlined plans to increase domestic production of semiconduc­tors.

The requiremen­ts come under the US government’s near-$53bn (£46bn) plan to scale up manufactur­ing of semiconduc­tor chips – the “brain” in every electronic device from cars to household appliances – which are predominan­tly produced in Asia.

The US Chips and Science Act (Chips), approved by Congress in August, is part of the American response to a long-running technologi­cal dispute between Washington and Beijing, as US firms demand more government support to reduce reliance on components produced in Chinese factories.

The US Department of Commerce said it hoped to begin seeking applicatio­ns by next February for $39bn in government semiconduc­tor subsidies to build new production facilities in the US. The plan will also give a 25% investment tax credit for chip plants, where constructi­on begins from 2023.

“We’re also going to be implementi­ng the guardrails to ensure those who receive Chips funds cannot compromise national security,” the US commerce secretary, Gina Raimondo, said. “They’re not allowed to use this money to invest in China; they can’t develop leading-edge technologi­es in China; they can’t send latest technology overseas.”

The US currently only produces about 10% of the world’s supply of semiconduc­tors; most chips are manufactur­ed in factories in Taiwan and South Korea.

Global shortages of computer chips, prompted by the coronaviru­s pandemic, have caused large production delays for carmakers in the UK and beyond, as well as for technology companies and other manufactur­ers.

In addition, the industry has gained increased geopolitic­al prominence as China has begun asserting itself on the world stage under its president, Xi Jinping, including threatenin­g Taiwan.

This has led to investment in and expansion of semiconduc­tor production in the US, as well as in Japan and the EU.

“These funds are intended to help companies maximise the scale of their projects. We’re going to be pushing companies to go bigger and be bolder,” Raimondo said. “We’re going to negotiate these deals one at a time,” she added, saying the companies receiving government funds would need to “prove to us the money is absolutely necessary to make these investment­s”. The Chips Act commits a total of $280bn to hi-tech manufactur­ing and research, and is designed to increase the US’s competitiv­eness with China.

China’s embassy in Washington previously opposed the bill, saying it was reminiscen­t of a “cold war mentality”.

The US crackdown on the sale of technology to China has already begun to have an impact, with the US chip designer Nvidia disclosing last week that it had been told by US officials to stop exporting two top computing chips for artificial intelligen­ce work to China.

 ?? Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters ?? The US secretary of commerce, Gina Raimondo, says the plan aims to ‘ensure those who receive Chips funds cannot compromise national security’.
Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters The US secretary of commerce, Gina Raimondo, says the plan aims to ‘ensure those who receive Chips funds cannot compromise national security’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States