Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Commerce chief: New limits ahead for Huawei suppliers

- JENNY LEONARD AND IAN KING BLOOMBERG NEWS

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said new rules are in the pipeline to put more limits on U.S. companies supplying China’s telecommun­ications leader Huawei Technologi­es Co. Huawei was blackliste­d last year as a security threat by the Trump administra­tion. That prevented many U.S. companies from selling to the Chinese company. However, some U.S. suppliers worked around the rules to continue sending some crucial electronic components to Huawei.

“They are works in progress that will come out near

term,” Ross said of the new restrictio­ns, during an interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d. A Commerce Department spokesman said the department will make an announceme­nt when it is ready.

Ross said the ultimate U.S. objective is not to cut Huawei off from all American suppliers, but instead to protect national security. He added that restrictio­ns on Huawei were not negotiated during phase one of the trade agreement with China. The next step in that broader process isn’t currently active, he said.

“As we stand right here, there’s no particular intent to negotiate it in phase two,” Ross said.

A further clampdown may jeopardize Huawei’s ability to continue making some of its biggest products. Chinese officials have threatened retaliatio­n against businesses that stop supporting the country’s largest technology company. Huawei has denied that it helps the Chinese government gain illicit access to informatio­n and has said its equipment is secure.

Ross earlier said on Bloomberg TV that Huawei has been encouragin­g U.S. companies to flout the rules, which is a “very dangerous practice and in the longer term is not going to be good for them.” The U.S. government is taking a close look at export-control mechanisms after seeing how Huawei was able to continue to buy from American companies.

Some U.S. companies have kept selling to Huawei by citing rules that limit the U.S. government’s ability to restrict exports. The provisions exempt certain products if companies can prove the majority of work done to create the items happens outside the U.S. The current threshold effectivel­y kicks in when 75% of the work occurs overseas. The administra­tion is debating raising this to 90%.

The rule change is currently with the Office of Management and Budget and could be approved shortly, according to people familiar with the process.

A separate new regulation that governs the direct supply of products is under considerat­ion by the Commerce Department and could make its way through the process in a matter of weeks, according to the people. That rule would apply to products that are designed in the U.S. but manufactur­ed entirely overseas, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private deliberati­ons.

Huawei is one of the world’s biggest purchasers of chips. U.S. semiconduc­tor makers have argued that a complete clampdown is counterpro­ductive, as many of the parts Huawei needs can be bought from non-U.S. providers.

The industry also is concerned that access to the Chinese market as a whole will be curtailed, a developmen­t that could hinder investment in research and developmen­t. The industry has made these arguments to President Donald Trump.

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