Daily Mail

Ban this Chinese takeaway

- Ruth Sunderland BUSINESS EDITOR

BRITISH politician­s have been permissive to the point of naivete in their attitudes to Chinese raids on UK national assets. Until recently, ministers were extremely relaxed about China’s involvemen­t in such key sectors as nuclear power, communicat­ions and energy supply.

The issue has come to the fore this weekend at HSBC, the UK’s biggest bank. its leading shareholde­r, a Chinese insurance company part-owned by the Communist state, has demanded HSBC dismember itself, by splitting off its Asian business.

In comparison with a multi-billion pound internatio­nal finance powerhouse like HSBC, the fate of Newport Wafer Fab, a microchip factory based in Wales, may seem a niche interest. Certainly, in City terms, the £63m deal to sell NWF to a Chineseown­ed rival is small beer.

But it will be the first big test for the new National security and investment Act, brought in this year to safeguard the country’s strategic interests. the decision Business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng takes on NWF will have a huge impact on the prosperity of the UK for decades to come.

Unfortunat­ely, the situation is already a mess. NWF has been sold to Nexperia, a Dutch company whose parent is the Chinese group Wingtech. that should never have been permitted. however, courtesy of the new Act, that sale can still be unpicked, which is exactly what should happen.

NWF ran into difficulty during Covid because it fell through the Government safety nets. this, according to observers, gave Nexperia an opening to strong-arm it into a takeover. Be that as it may, it is astounding that the deal was waved through. it raises competitio­n concerns, since it gives the Chinese, who via Nexperia own another facility in Manchester, control of around 65pc of large-scale UK power chip manufactur­e. A third plant in Greenock, near Glasgow, is owned by a Us company.

THAT leaves the UK in a parlous situation for sovereign chip production at a time when every other major economy is ramping up, not selling off. Wisely so, given chips are used in everything from smart phones to washing machines and electric cars.

Some fear that Wingtech’s acquisitio­n of NWF is an opportunis­tic, short-term move to tide it over until a new facility is opened in shanghai in a couple of years. that is speculatio­n but the stakes are very high.

Before the takeover, NWF was engaged in research in sensitive areas including defence cybersecur­ity, 5G telecoms and robotics. it was also the only independen­t open-access facility of any scale in the UK.

The handling of the deal has been shambolic. Boris Johnson last year asked national security adviser sir stephen Lovegrove to examine the transactio­n. But MPs on the foreign affairs committee said so few details had been provided that they were ‘left with the unfortunat­e conclusion that no review has taken place’. that is truly shocking.

A report last month claimed Lovegrove believed it did not merit interventi­on. the Government says it has made no decisions.

In the Cameron years, China was courted as an investor. Under theresa May and then Johnson, the climate chilled. Even so, ministers welcomed Jingye of China when it bought British steel in 2019.

The UK tends to see takeovers such as that of NWF through a commercial lens, sometimes clouded by greed or expediency. But in Beijing, opportunit­ies to pounce on western companies or to finance infrastruc­ture projects are seized upon, as a way of advancing political interests.

Time we woke up.

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