China SMIC Fights US
in Chip War
·
SMIC,
is manufacturing chips with features less than one-15,000th of the thickness of
a sheet of paper.
·
U.S.
officials say such advanced chip technology is central not just to commercial
businesses but also to military superiority. They have been fighting to keep it
out of Chinese hands, by barring China from buying both the world’s most
cutting-edge chips and the machinery to make them.
·
SMIC
pumps out millions of chips a month for other companies that design them, such
as Huawei, the Chinese technology firm under U.S. sanctions, as well as
American firms like Qualcomm.
·
But
it is racing forward with a new A.I. chip for Huawei called the Ascend 910C,
which is expected to be released this year.
·
Nvidia,
the U.S. chip giant, which the White House has banned for sale in China.
·
Beijing
has invested more than $150 billion in the chip industry, including a $47
billion investment fund announced in May, helping to fuel a stunning factory
expansion.
·
SMIC
alone operates more than a dozen chip manufacturing facilities, called fabs,
around China, and is planning or constructing at least 10 more.
·
SMIC,
which has nearly 19,000 employees, spent $4.5 billion on capital expenditures
in the first half of this year, more than it earned in revenue, according to
its financial filings.
·
It
shipped nearly four million wafers in the first half of the year, each of which
can be split into hundreds or thousands of chips.
·
SMIC
was founded in eastern Shanghai in 2000 by Richard Chang, a Taiwanese American
who worked for decades at the U.S. chipmaker Texas Instruments and became known
as the father of Chinese semiconductors.
·
SMIC
created a housing development with an international school and opened churches
near its factories.
·
SMIC
built new fabs at a breakneck pace, becoming the world’s third-biggest chip
foundry — the term for a business that makes chips on behalf of other companies
— within four years of its founding. It offered cheap prices to firms like
Qualcomm, Broadcom and Texas Instruments.
·
Its
biggest shareholders — China Information and Communication Technology Group, Datang Holdings and China Integrated Circuit Industry
Investment Fund — are all state-owned.
·
In
2019, the Trump administration persuaded the Netherlands to block a sale by the
Dutch firm ASML to SMIC of its most advanced chipmaking machine over concerns
that it would aid China militarily.
·
In
2020, the White House slapped trade restrictions on SMIC after the publication
of a report detailing its links to a major Chinese defense
conglomerate and military-affiliated universities.
·
China’s
imports of chipmaking equipment in the first seven months of this year surged
53 percent from the same period in 2023.
·
“U.S.
companies would say, accurately, if you tried to put SMIC out of business
tomorrow, there would be collateral damage for U.S. companies,” said Chris
Miller, the author of “Chip War,” a history of the industry.
·
Huawei
released a phone with a SMIC chip that exceeded the technology limits
previously set by U.S. restrictions. The timing was viewed as a slap in the
face to the United States.
·
SMIC
would most likely lag other international chip giants by three to five years
even if China developed substitutes soon for critical chipmaking equipment.
· SMIC could make 1.2 million A.I. chips for Huawei next year, double this year.
Efforts
by the Beijing-backed Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation, or
SMIC, to break through innovation barriers have landed it in a geopolitical
tech battle.
In
a sprawling factory in eastern Shanghai, where marshy plains have long since
been converted into industrial parks, China’s most advanced chipmaker has been hard
at work testing the limits of U.S. authority.
Semiconductor
Manufacturing International Corporation, or SMIC, is manufacturing chips with
features less than one-15,000th of the thickness of a sheet of paper. The chips
pack together enough computing power to create advancements like artificial
intelligence and 5G networks.
It’s
a feat that has been achieved by just a few companies globally — and one that
has landed SMIC in the middle of a crucial geopolitical rivalry. U.S. officials
say such advanced chip technology is central not just to commercial businesses
but also to military superiority. They have been fighting to keep it out of
Chinese hands, by barring China from buying both the world’s most cutting-edge
chips and the machinery to make them.
Whether
China can advance and outrace the United States technologically now hinges on
SMIC, a partly state-backed company that is the sole maker of advanced chips in
the country and has become its de facto national semiconductor champion. SMIC
pumps out millions of chips a month for other companies that design them, such
as Huawei, the Chinese technology firm under U.S. sanctions, as well as
American firms like Qualcomm.
So
far, SMIC hasn’t been able to produce chips as advanced as those of rivals such
as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company in Taiwan, or others in South
Korea and the United States. But it is racing forward with a new A.I. chip for
Huawei called the Ascend 910C, which is expected to be released this year.
Huawei’s
chip is not as fast or sophisticated as the coveted processors from Nvidia, the
U.S. chip giant, which the White House has banned for sale in China. SMIC can
also most likely make only a small fraction of what Chinese firms want to buy,
experts said.
But
the chip would still be a boon for China’s A.I. ambitions. Nvidia’s components
are the secret sauce in A.I. computing clusters that can train chatbots, unlock
new medicines and help design hypersonic missiles. If Huawei, with SMIC’s help,
can make more A.I. chips in the coming years, that could blunt the impact of
American technology restrictions — and perhaps one day cut into Nvidia’s lead.
SMIC
did not respond to requests for comment. Huawei and the U.S. Department of
Commerce, which oversees technology controls, declined to comment.
In
an interview in June, Gina M. Raimondo, the commerce secretary, said that the
United States led the world in A.I., and that tech restrictions were helping to
maintain that lead. “We have protected, to a large extent, our most
sophisticated technology from getting to China,” she said.
Liu
Pengyu, a spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in the
United States, said China opposed “politicizing and weaponizing trade,
scientific and technological issues.” He added, “Sanctions and repression will
not deter the development of China and Chinese enterprises.”
Beijing has invested more than $150
billion in the chip industry, including a $47 billion investment fund announced
in May, helping to fuel a stunning factory expansion. SMIC alone operates more than a dozen
chip manufacturing facilities, called fabs, around China, and is planning or
constructing at least 10 more,
according to Paul Triolo, a tech expert at Albright
Stonebridge who tracks the industry.
SMIC, which has nearly 19,000 employees,
spent $4.5 billion on capital expenditures in the first half of this year, more
than it earned in revenue, according to its financial filings. Among contract chipmakers, it lags only
TSMC in Taiwan and Samsung in South Korea in sales. It
shipped nearly four million wafers in the first half of the year, each of which
can be split into hundreds or thousands of chips.
U.S.
export controls have “forced China and Chinese companies to get better across
the board,” Mr. Triolo said. While these companies
face major hurdles, “they have already made significant progress to get where
they are now, and you can’t really underestimate their ability to doggedly
pursue overcoming the other obstacles.”
A
national chip champion
SMIC was founded in eastern Shanghai in
2000 by Richard Chang, a Taiwanese American who worked for decades at the U.S.
chipmaker Texas Instruments and became known as the father of Chinese
semiconductors. SMIC
was immediately viewed as China’s answer to TSMC, which is the world’s biggest
maker of cutting-edge chips.
To
court overseas engineers, SMIC created a housing
development with an international school and opened churches near its
factories. The company hired from TSMC’s research and development team,
including Liang Mong-song, SMIC’s current co-chief executive.
SMIC built new fabs at a breakneck pace,
becoming the world’s third-biggest chip foundry — the term for a business that
makes chips on behalf of other companies — within four years of its founding.
It offered cheap prices to firms like Qualcomm, Broadcom and Texas Instruments.
In 2004, it listed on
stock exchanges in New York and Hong Kong.
SMIC’s
ties with the Chinese government have grown closer over time. Its biggest shareholders — China Information and
Communication Technology Group, Datang
Holdings and China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund — are all
state-owned. By 2015, around half of SMIC’s board seats were controlled
by people with close ties to the state.
Government
support did not guarantee success. After a spate of overbuilding, SMIC was
forced to sell off several facilities. In 2019, it delisted from the New York
Stock Exchange, listing in Shanghai the next year.
By
then, China’s chip industry had attracted U.S. attention as a national security
issue. In 2019, the Trump administration persuaded the
Netherlands to block a sale by the Dutch firm ASML to SMIC of its most advanced
chipmaking machine over concerns that it would aid China militarily.
In 2020, the White House slapped trade
restrictions on SMIC after the publication of a report detailing its links to a
major Chinese defense
conglomerate and military-affiliated universities. SMIC denied connections to the military.
The Biden administration later tightened the restrictions.
But
the rules have allowed for workarounds. Companies have continued selling less
advanced equipment to SMIC’s new factories by obtaining special licenses and
routing sales through non-U.S. subsidiaries and employees.
Given
these loopholes, some said it was no mystery that SMIC had progressed.
“The
fence has gotten higher, but we’ve decided to leave open the front, side and
back gate,” said Jimmy Goodrich, a senior adviser for technology analysis to
the RAND Corporation.
Today,
North American customers account for about a sixth of SMIC’s revenue. The
company’s boxy silver factory in eastern Shanghai where it makes advanced chips
for Huawei sits in a compound connected to other factories that sell chips that
go into products sold around the United States, and buy machinery from American
companies.
According
to Chinese customs data, China’s imports of chipmaking
equipment in the first seven months of this year surged 53 percent from the
same period in 2023.
Officials
seeking tougher limits on SMIC have faced pushback from those who say that
could damage the United States economically, since SMIC also works with
American companies.
When
Congress tried in 2022 to pass a law barring the Pentagon from buying products
containing SMIC chips, automakers, weapons companies and others complained,
saying the components were woven through their supply chains, people familiar
with the discussions said.
The
law, which eventually passed, was changed to give defense
suppliers five more years to cut their ties with Chinese chipmakers that had
military connections.
In
August 2023, as Ms. Raimondo visited China on a diplomatic trip, Huawei released a phone with a SMIC chip that exceeded the
technology limits previously set by U.S. restrictions. The timing was viewed as
a slap in the face to the United States.
Analysts
and U.S. chip executives concluded that SMIC had repurposed less advanced
equipment to make a more advanced chip.
Both
TSMC and Intel, the U.S. chip giant, tried the same method in the past. But the
strategy can result in many faulty chips, and Intel found it wasn’t
commercially viable, semiconductor experts said.
In
response, U.S. officials have been drafting even tighter rules that would
target some SMIC factories. They have also pushed Dutch and Japanese officials
to stop supplying SMIC’s most advanced fabs. This month, the Netherlands issued
new rules that brought its export controls in line with U.S. regulations.
The
limited access to advanced equipment has undoubtedly held SMIC back, and some
experts argue that, as competitors like TSMC and Intel innovate, and as the
United States and its allies ramp up their technology controls, China will be
left further behind. The constraints already appear to have slowed the rollout
of some of Huawei’s new products.
Galen
Zeng, a senior research manager at IDC, a market intelligence firm, estimated
that SMIC would most likely lag other international
chip giants by three to five years even if China developed substitutes soon for
critical chipmaking equipment.
Still,
Dylan Patel, the chief analyst at SemiAnalysis, a
research firm, estimated that SMIC could make 1.2
million A.I. chips for Huawei next year, double this year — far fewer than
what China needs or what American chip designers make, but indicating an upward
trajectory.
In
an electronics market in Shenzhen in April, John Wu, a Huawei vendor, said
Huawei’s A.I. chips had limited availability. But he expressed confidence that
Chinese firms would continue to develop, and that competition would ultimately
hurt the United States.
He
described the U.S. restrictions using a Chinese expression — like “lifting a
rock only to drop it on one’s own feet,” he said.