China labels Micron chips ‘security risk’, effectively banning US firm’s products
The Chinese government said yesterday that products made by US memory chip company Micron Technology posed a national security risk and would be banned from sales to China’s key information infrastructure operators.
The US memory chip giant failed to pass a cybersecurity review, making its products prohibited for sale by China’s critical information infrastructure operators (CIIOs), which include a wide range of entities from telecoms operators to banks and water utilities.
As such, all CIIOs must cease buying Micron’s products, the Cyber Security Review Office under the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), said yesterday.
CIIO regulations in China are expansive, covering numerous sectors considered crucial to national security and people’s livelihoods, including public interest sectors such as communications and information services, energy, transport, water resources and finance.
The decision comes 50 days after the CAC launched a probe into Micron’s products in late March on the grounds of national security. According to the latest statement, Micron’s products were found to have “severe cybersecurity risks, posing significant security risks to China’s critical information infrastructure supply chain and to our national security”.
The ruling will have a de facto effect of banning the sale of Micron products in China, effectively erasing a market that contributed about 11 per cent of the company’s total revenue of US$30.8 billion in 2022, comprising chip products such as DRAM, NAND flash memory and solid state drives.
Micron’s top customers in China, ranked by contributions to its revenue, were Lenovo, Xiaomi, Inspur Electronics Information, ZTE, Coolpad, China Electronics Corporation and Oppo, according to a search of Bloomberg data.
“The text [of the CAC statement] did not show if the ruling has recourse,” said a Beijingbased cybersecurity lawyer.
Micron did not immediately reply to a request for comment sent outside business hours yesterday.
China’s move against Micron, the first involving a major US chip maker, was seen by some industry watchers as Beijing’s retaliation against the US chip company after it lobbied Washington to take measures to restrict China’s access to advanced chip technologies. In October last year, the Biden administration tightened exports of advanced US semiconductor technologies to China, including chip-making equipment and design software, citing the potential risk of US core technology getting into the hands of the Chinese military.
Analysts said Beijing’s cybersecurity probe into Micron, the world’s fourth-largest chip firm, could shake up the memory chip supply chain in China, and prove a boon for South Korean memory chip makers Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, as well as sanctions-hit Chinese supplier Yangtze Memory Technologies Corporation.
Earlier this month, Micron appointed Betty Wu Mingxia as the new general manager of Micron China, to “embody the company’s unwavering commitment to the local technology ecosystem, business operations, and various stakeholders in China”, the company said at the time.
Wu, who joined Micron in 2018 and will continue to serve as vice-president of its DRAM packaging and test operations in the northwest city of Xian, said in a statement that Micron China “plays a critical role in enhancing the company’s global footprint and DRAM technology leadership”.