Two Chinese Start-ups Tried to Catch Up to
Makers of Advanced Computer Chips—and Failed
Foundries with ties to a little-known Chinese entrepreneur
set out to match TSMC and Samsung, but never commercially produced an advanced semiconductor
A semiconductor being planted on an interface board
during a 2016 semiconductor research project at Tsinghua Unigroup
in Beijing.
China
has spent billions of dollars in recent years trying to catch up to the world’s
most advanced semiconductor makers.
Two
foundry projects, led in part by a little-known entrepreneur then in his 30s,
help show why China has yet to succeed.
The
projects, in the Chinese cities of Wuhan and Jinan, were supposed to churn out
semiconductors...
China
has spent billions of dollars in recent years trying to catch up to the world’s
most advanced semiconductor makers.
Two
foundry projects, led in part by a little-known entrepreneur then in his 30s,
help show why China has yet to succeed.
The
projects, in the Chinese cities of Wuhan and Jinan, were supposed to churn out
semiconductors nearly as complex as the more-sophisticated chips made by
industry leaders Taiwan Semiconductor
Manufacturing Co. and
Samsung Electronics Co. , which have decades
of chip-building experience.
Chinese
officials kicked in hundreds of millions of dollars to support the upstarts.
But it quickly became clear the plans had been too ambitious, and local
officials had underestimated how difficult—and
costly—it is to make complex high-end chips.
The
two foundries, Wuhan Hongxin Semiconductor
Manufacturing Corp. and Quanxin Integrated Circuit
Manufacturing (Jinan) Co., burned through cash, yet never commercially built
any chips.
HSMC
formally shut down in June 2021. QXIC still exists but has suspended
operations, and didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Over
the past three years, at least six new major chip-building projects, including
HSMC and QXIC, have failed in China, according to company statements, state media,
local government documents and Tianyancha, a
corporate registration database. At least $2.3 billion went into these
projects, much of it coming from governments, the documents showed. Some never
produced a single chip.
The
Wall Street Journal spoke with a man who identified himself as one of the
organizers of the HSMC and QXIC projects. Named Cao Shan in the Tianyancha database, he is listed as the previous chief
executive of QXIC, a former board member of HSMC, and a former major
shareholder in the firms. The Journal also spoke to former employees of QXIC
and other people familiar with the matter for this article.
Beijing
leaders and investors are poking through the wreckage of struggling
semiconductor businesses in hopes of salvaging some parts, while also writing
tougher rules to prevent future waste.
While
the government for years has unofficially requested that certain chip makers
seek approval for new projects, now approval is required for projects involving
more than roughly $150 million in fixed asset investment, people familiar with
the matter said.
In
December, Tsinghua Unigroup Co., a Chinese chip
conglomerate that defaulted on billions of dollars of bonds over the past year,
said a consortium led by two state-backed semiconductor venture-capital firms
would become its strategic investor.
A global chip shortage is affecting
how quickly we can drive a car off the lot or buy a new laptop. WSJ visits a
fabrication plant in Singapore to see the complex process of chip making and
how one manufacturer is trying to overcome the shortage.
Making
more semiconductors is a vital priority for China. Chinese chip makers produce
about 17% of the chips the country needs, according to International Business
Strategies Inc., an industry consulting and analysis firm—leaving China reliant
on foreign producers.
When
it comes to building the most advanced chips, like ones used for smartphone and
computer processors, China—which has been hit by U.S. sanctions restricting
some companies from accessing certain chip-making technologies—could fall
further behind, experts say.
Two
entities involved in China’s semiconductor policies, the National Development
and Reform Commission of China and the Ministry of Industry and Information
Technology, didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Evidence
of China’s societal frustration over its dependence on foreign chips flared up
in late December, after U.S. semiconductor giant Intel
Corp. sent a letter asking suppliers to avoid sourcing from
the Xinjiang region, where China’s government has conducted a campaign of
forcible assimilation against religious minorities.
Intel was criticized in China after asking suppliers to
avoid sourcing from the Xinjiang region; it attended ChinaJoy,
the digital-entertainment expo in Shanghai last summer.
Angry
about the perceived slight, Chinese social-media users criticized Intel, with
some lamenting China’s lack of sufficiently-advanced domestic chips to
substitute for Intel’s.
Intel
apologized and said its letter was written only to comply with U.S.
law.
Beijing
in around 2014 began unveiling industry-support plans that included a $22
billion central-government kitty for chip investments, known as the Big Fund.
Local governments set up similar funds. In 2019, the state established a second
national semiconductor fund of about $30 billion.
Soon,
chip money was sloshing across China. Tens of thousands of Chinese companies
registered their businesses as related to semiconductors, including some whose
main activities involved restaurants and cement-making, according to the Tianyancha database.
China
did improve at some aspects of chip making, including designing chips. But some
companies went belly up because they didn’t have sufficient
expertise or capital, industry experts say.
The
Wuhan and Jinan projects were intended to start by making chips with circuitry
measured at 14 nanometers or smaller—an area dominated by TSMC and Samsung
—before moving on within a few years to 7 nanometers, according to company
materials and government documents.
HSMC
attracted a former top TSMC executive as chief executive. QXIC recruited dozens
of experienced engineers from Taiwan, including from TSMC, with relatively big
pay packages, according to former employees.
A chip from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. on
view at the World Semiconductor Conference in Nanjing, China, in 2020.
Soon,
according to state media, it became clear that HSMC was far short of the
funding needed to make advanced chips, which can cost billions of dollars to
produce commercially.
At
QXIC, work progressed slowly, former employees said. Although the engineers
QXIC recruited had knowledge in technical aspects of chip making, QXIC lacked
knowledge to integrate those skills, one of the people said.
In
August 2020, Wuhan’s local government said the HSMC project was suspended due
to financial difficulties, according to state media, and it was formally shut
down in 2021.
After
several other government-sponsored chip projects also went under, Jinan’s
government took over QXIC and began letting its employees go, according to
people familiar with the matter.
An
official at Jinan Innovation Zone, a Jinan government-run business district
where QXIC is located, said the company’s operations have been suspended.
The
Wall Street Journal located the man who identified himself as one of the
organizers of the two projects through a phone number associated with one of
QXIC’s main shareholders in the Tianyancha database.
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The
man said that while he had used the name Cao Shan in corporate documents, his
real name was Bao Enbao. He
said he had played an important role in helping assemble technology and talent
for the projects and used the pseudonym Cao Shan to avoid potential troubles
when recruiting in Taiwan, which has been scrutinizing talent poaching from the
mainland.
He
said he had around 15 years of experience in the industry, after founding a
chip-design firm in 2005, and made connections at TSMC after ordering chips to
be made there. When asked about domestic media reports that suggested his
conduct wasn’t always aboveboard, he said: “Do you think local governments are
that easily fooled?”
He
said he left the Wuhan project in October 2018 after disagreeing with
executives over how to develop it. He said that he left the Jinan project in
December 2020 as Beijing increased scrutiny on chip projects, and that in May,
Jinan’s government pushed the company he runs out as a main shareholder.
The
Wuhan and Jinan governments didn’t respond to requests for comment.
As
troubles emerged at projects like HSMC, Beijing recalibrated its approach. In
October 2020, the National Development and Reform Commission, China’s economic
planner, said that companies without talent, experience and sufficient
technology had blindly set up semiconductor projects, and that officials who
supported such projects would be held responsible.