Raevenlord
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The United States government, via the Department of Commerce, has banned all exports from national companies to China-based Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuits Ltd. The ban, citing "significant risk of becoming involved in activities that are contrary to the national security interests of the United States", demands that a license is required for "all exports, re-exports, and transfers of commodities, software and technology (...) to Jinhua." It then adds that these license applications will be reviewed - always - with a presumption of denial.
According to the announcement, Jinhua is nearing completion of substantial production capacity for DRAM memory (which it is; the company is finishing construction of a $5.7 billion factory in China's Fujian Province). The announcement then goes on to say that this additional production, which is supported by "likely U.S.-origin technology", referring to the patent war going on between Fujian and Idaho-based Micron, threatens the long term economic viability of U.S. suppliers of these essential components of U.S. military systems. And of course, any company looking to produce modern semiconductors essentially has to have access to products and tools that are only available via US companies - which means that either construction of the Fujian facility is finished, or the company will have a hard time bringing it to production status, thus burying the funds already invested.
According to Washington trade lawyer Douglas Jacobson, quoted by Reuters, the use of the "entity list" - where Fujian now finds itself and which bans exports pending review - to protect the economic viability of a U.S. industry appears to be unprecedented, adding that "This appears to be a dramatic expansion of the use of the entity list for economic purposes."
As an addendum, this likely won't favor - at all - DRAM pricing for the end-user. Additional production capacity would increase available supply, and that might not be in the cards anymore, at least from Fujian, following this move by the US government.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
According to the announcement, Jinhua is nearing completion of substantial production capacity for DRAM memory (which it is; the company is finishing construction of a $5.7 billion factory in China's Fujian Province). The announcement then goes on to say that this additional production, which is supported by "likely U.S.-origin technology", referring to the patent war going on between Fujian and Idaho-based Micron, threatens the long term economic viability of U.S. suppliers of these essential components of U.S. military systems. And of course, any company looking to produce modern semiconductors essentially has to have access to products and tools that are only available via US companies - which means that either construction of the Fujian facility is finished, or the company will have a hard time bringing it to production status, thus burying the funds already invested.
According to Washington trade lawyer Douglas Jacobson, quoted by Reuters, the use of the "entity list" - where Fujian now finds itself and which bans exports pending review - to protect the economic viability of a U.S. industry appears to be unprecedented, adding that "This appears to be a dramatic expansion of the use of the entity list for economic purposes."
As an addendum, this likely won't favor - at all - DRAM pricing for the end-user. Additional production capacity would increase available supply, and that might not be in the cards anymore, at least from Fujian, following this move by the US government.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site