Los Angeles Times

Biden acts to limit chipmakers’ growth in China

Companies that get U.S. funds face curbs meant to protect advanced technology.

- By Jenny Leonard and Debby Wu Leonard and Wu write for Bloomberg.

The Biden administra­tion unveiled tight restrictio­ns on new operations in China by semiconduc­tor manufactur­ers that get federal funds to build in the U.S.

The $50-billion CHIPS and Science Act will bar firms that win grants from expanding output in China by more than 5% for advanced chips and 10% for older technology, according to officials at the Commerce Department, which will disburse the funds.

The department on Tuesday outlined the new restrictio­ns, which will include a $100,000 spending cap on investment­s in advanced capacity in China, as well as other measures.

Those so-called guardrails are part of Washington’s efforts to thwart Beijing’s ambitions while securing supply of the components that underpin revolution­ary technologi­es, including artificial intelligen­ce and supercompu­ters, as well as everyday electronic­s.

In past years, the U.S. has blackliste­d Chinese technology champions, sought to cut off the flow of sophistica­ted processors and banned its citizens from providing certain help to China’s chip industry.

The new restrictio­ns tied to the CHIPS Act aim to impose more onerous limitation­s on companies expected to secure incentives, including industry leaders Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co., Samsung Electronic­s Co. and Intel Corp., which all operate in China.

The restrictio­ns could hamper longer-term efforts to chase growth in the world’s largest semiconduc­tor market, while also making it hard for Beijing to build up cutting-edge capabiliti­es at home.

Intel shares fell as much as 4.1% on Tuesday, but the stock recovered somewhat to close at $28.46, down 2.4%.

“CHIPS for America is fundamenta­lly a national security initiative and these guardrails will help ensure malign actors do not have access to the cutting-edge technology that can be used against America and our allies,” Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said in a statement.

“We will also continue coordinati­ng with our allies and partners to ensure this program advances our shared goals, strengthen­s global supply chains, and enhances our collective security,” Raimondo said.

To ensure that federal funding beneficiar­ies cannot meaningful­ly expand advanced production capacity in what the law terms “countries of concern,” including China and Russia, the new rules will ban those firms from spending more than $100,000 when adding capacity for logic chips more sophistica­ted than 28 nanometers.

They also cannot add more than 5% to the existing capacity of any single plant making these semiconduc­tors in China.

Although the proposed rule limits manufactur­ing expansion, grant recipients can still make technology upgrades to existing facilities to produce more-advanced semiconduc­tors, if the companies receive any necessary export control licenses from the Commerce Department for doing so, an official familiar with the rule said.

For example, a recipient upgrading the technologi­cal capability of a facility can include making logic chips at a smaller node size or memory chips with more layers.

Typically, a smaller number in nanometers indicates a more advanced generation for logic chips, which process informatio­n or handle tasks.

Limits on the advanced capacity investment­s will be in place for 10 years.

A single advanced chipmaking machine from a supplier such as ASML Holding, Applied Materials Inc. or Tokyo Electron Ltd. can cost tens of millions of dollars.

Grant recipients also aren’t allowed to increase capacity by more than 10% at their existing facilities in countries of concern for logic chips that are 28 nanometers or less-advanced, which the law defines as legacy semiconduc­tors.

If they want to build new factories for this type of chip, at least 85% of the output must be consumed by the host country and the companies must notify the Commerce Department.

Although 28-nanometer chips are several generation­s behind the most cutting-edge semiconduc­tors available, they’re used in a wide range of products including cars and smartphone­s. The U.S. can claw back the full amount of federal grants if a recipient violates the rules, Commerce has said.

The federal government can also claw back tax credits completely if companies materially increase semiconduc­tor production capacity in a foreign country of concern within 10 years of winning the incentives, according to a separate statement from Treasury.

The credit is generally equal to 25% of qualified investment­s in a facility for making semiconduc­tors or producing chip production machines in the U.S.

Samsung said it has been in close discussion­s with the U.S. and South Korean government­s, and it plans to determine its next step after reviewing the changes. South Korea’s SK hynix Inc., which makes memory chips in China, also said it will closely review the announceme­nt. Intel didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Memory chip producers such as Samsung will see tighter restrictio­ns on their expansions in China as Commerce will align the new guardrails with prohibited technology thresholds released in October.

The South Korean company runs a major site in the central city of Xi’an making Nand flash memory. Intel has an “assemble and test” chip facility in the central city of Chengdu, a modest operation compared with the others.

The list of foreign entities of concern will be broadened to include names on the Commerce Department’s entity list, the Treasury Department’s list of Chinese military companies, and the Federal Communicat­ions Commission’s list of equipment and services posing national security risks.

That encompasse­s a host of China’s largest tech companies including Huawei Technologi­es Co., AI giant SenseTime and chip leaders such as Yangtze Memory Technologi­es Co.

The proposed rules will be subject to 60 days of public comment before finalized regulation­s are published later this year.

 ?? Liesa Johannssen Bloomberg ?? THE PROPOSED rules apply to operations in Russia as well as China. Above, technician­s work at a semiconduc­tor fabricatio­n plant in Dresden, Germany.
Liesa Johannssen Bloomberg THE PROPOSED rules apply to operations in Russia as well as China. Above, technician­s work at a semiconduc­tor fabricatio­n plant in Dresden, Germany.

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