Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
China Hardware Technology

Dutch Chip Equipment Maker ASML's CEO Pushes Back Against US Export Rules On China (reuters.com) 66

Slashdot reader hackingbear writes: Peter Wennink, the chief executive of ASML Holding NV, the Dutch semiconductor equipment maker, on Tuesday questioned whether a U.S. push to get the Netherlands to adopt new rules restricting exports to China make sense. "He said that following U.S. pressure, the Dutch government has already restricted ASML from exporting its most advanced lithography machines to China since 2019, something he said has benefited U.S. companies selling alternative technology," reports Reuters. "He said that while 15% of ASML's sales are in China, at U.S. chip equipment suppliers 'it is 25 or sometimes more than 30%.'"

In response to U.S. claims that advanced chips owned by China pose a threat to national security due to military applications and the rise of artificial intelligence, Wennink said: "What constitutes national security is for Americans to determine. But it is common knowledge that chip technology for purely military applications is usually ten, fifteen years old. The technology used to make such chips can still be sold to China. Artificial intelligence requires the most advanced chips. They are made with EUV and are therefore not produced in China. But those chips are simply sold, also to the Chinese. American chip manufacturers have no problem with China as a customer."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Dutch Chip Equipment Maker ASML's CEO Pushes Back Against US Export Rules On China

Comments Filter:
  • Apparently the Netherlands has already gone along with the US and Japan. It's a done deal. Perhaps ASML would prefer to move to China?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Opening R&D facilities in China or Taiwan must seem like a good idea right now. China is a huge market for them, and growing rapidly. Getting locked out of it would be very bad for them.

      • If someone was able to replicate their 250million dollar tool, someone would have done it by now. Good luck copying it.
      • Not if they want to keep that research instead of having it used against them by the corrupt monsters that comprise the CCP. It’s not bad for anyone in the West to be locked out of helping evil men become stronger and more dangerous.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          If that was going to happen it would have already. China has their high end tech, it's only the new stuff that they might not be able to export in future.

          Turns out that it's not trivial to clone this stuff.

          Besides, plenty of other companies somehow operate in China without having their tech stolen. Apple comes to mind. In fact they are playing catch up to Chinese companies on things like camera quality.

          We really need to stop punching ourselves in the dick like this.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Friday December 16, 2022 @12:02AM (#63134478)

      The Netherlands agreed to block the sale of EUV technology to China. The US wants them to block DUV as well. They're pushing back on that.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        ASML has already been blocked from selling EUV equipment, under the Wassenaar Arrangement, since 2018. Specifically the US will be wanting the Dutch government and ASML to block sales of ArFi (Argon-Fluorine immersion) DUV equipment as SMEE (Shanghai Micro Electronics Equipment) can already produce their own i-line and KrF DUV equipment capable of manufacturing chips down to 90nm features.

        All this press about ASML and bugger all about their Japanese competitors in the DUV market: Canon and Nikon. Bias much?

      • Apparently China already has DUV figured out so, not really that big of a deal. All the cutting-edge nodes are using some variant of EUV now anyway.

  • by HotNeedleOfInquiry ( 598897 ) on Thursday December 15, 2022 @10:29PM (#63134392)
    I think not.
  • by Gavino ( 560149 ) on Thursday December 15, 2022 @10:30PM (#63134394)
    There's a big difference between selling the chips and letting them manufacturer the chips themselves. If war breaks out, then exports can be stopped. You can't stop anything if they are making the chips themselves.
    China needs to be hurt. Not hurt the Chinese people, but hurt the CCP. All these people commenting from their free countries have no idea what oppression and fear Chinese people have to live through, and the amount of destruction the CCP is unleashing on the world right now with their carbon emissions, debt diplomacy, and eventual starting of WW3 in the South China Sea in trying to take over the sovereign democratic country of Taiwan. That's China's "Ukraine", in that they wrongly think they own it.
    mod me down - CCP trolls
    • by ghoul ( 157158 )
      You are a Russian troll trying to start shit. Or you are being extremely subtle with the sarcasm. Which is it?
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Both of you sound like slow adults

    • China needs to be hurt. Not hurt the Chinese people, but hurt the CCP.

      I agree we need to impact the CCP, but there's really no way to do that without affecting the Chinese people. However, it seems like this will actually be good for them, because with less advanced tech they not only need more chips so there will be more jobs in making them (however few) but they also will need to spend more on education to have a hope of developing their own alternatives, and education tends to be democratizing.

  • No⦠just no (Score:5, Insightful)

    by LostMyBeaver ( 1226054 ) on Thursday December 15, 2022 @11:31PM (#63134458)
    AI chips DO NOT require the latest die sizes. That is utter crap. It simply requires massive numbers of cores and there is absolutely no reason AI needs 3nm tech. All that does is shrink the foot print of the machines in terms of size, heat and power.

    Huawei for example now sells as part of their product portfolio multiple forms of energy production. This includes among other things, solar farms. When I sit in sales rooms with us, we we bring up the power cost issue of using Chinese chips, they then tell us that they can deliver the power as well via solar, wind and other.

    China can easily produce large scale tensor processors for AI using 100% Chinese technology. They just are not as efficient, but they can still go huge. In fact, they can scale far past the US already because they do produce on older tech and they have grown their production capacity of those old dies to produce massively.

    The only thing depriving China from EUV accomplishes is blocking them from higher speed signals. That means that making 60Ghz radio chips for 5G towers can be an issue. They have to depend on TSMC and Samsung to make those chips.

    Some people would suggest that portable processors for sensors, phones, watches, etc… could be a problem. The truth is that we have barely scraped the surface of what can be done at 14 or 12nm.

    For many years, ARM would advance their cores to reduce power consumption. When working with Nokia, I would be harassed relentlessly about cutting power consumption of my code. Today, we are hogging power at a truly unacceptable scale. The latest Blink web engine is a whore.

    If the Chinese invest in optimization to meet performance demands on edge devices, they will be far ahead of all their western competitors who depend on better chips to compensate for poor code quality.

    Also, for edge devices, lower power is great, but more power works too. Telephones with better batteries would accomplish the same as telephones with chips that consume less power.

    It seems to me that depriving China from ASML tech will achieve a few things

    1) Dissolve ASMLs monopoly on fab equipment. Effectively meaning China will build and distribute EUV and future technology at a fraction of the price of ASML
    2) Force China to catch up to and possibly advance past western tech
    3) Place China in an ideal position to sanction the US and keep the US from having access to Chinese tech which will inevitably pass western tech because China will do anything and everything in its power to never be dependent on the US again

    For the sake of national security, the absolute smartest thing the US can do is to make China dependent in ASML tech and lethargic. If China can openly by western chip tech, they will probably slow down their development of competing technology. This would give the west a chance of keeping up or staying ahead for another 10 years or so. By then, everyone who can be blamed for forcing China to basically crush the entire west will be dead or senile.

    That said, I really hope China does compete with ASML because this single supplier thing is a disaster.

    What would happen if ASML went bankrupt or a building full of their scientists and engineers burned down with them in it tomorrow. That sounds like a much bigger national security problem to me.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by karpis ( 1375295 )
      You talk like EUV is something that no one bothered to do. If anybody could do it, they would and save some pretty penny, but it is a colossal task. Also there is more than machines, pure chemical reagents and other stuff is important. We have to stop feeding the dragon and then it will eat itself in the long run.
      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        You talk like EUV is something that no one bothered to do. If anybody could do it, they would and save some pretty penny, but it is a colossal task.

        EUV has been around for decades - since the late 90s as the way to get to the next generation of semiconductors.

        In the early 2000s, the big problem was making an EUV source brighter than the handful of watts it could currently produce. By comparison, the UV sources used for photolithography could produce a couple hundred watts of light power. By the 2010s they g

    • there is absolutely no reason AI needs 3nm tech. All that does is shrink the foot print of the machines in terms of size, heat and power.

      Oh, all it does is make it affordable to operate? Why didn't you say so?

      I really hope China does compete with ASML because this single supplier thing is a disaster.

      If they could have, they would have.

      • Oh, all it does is make it affordable to operate? Why didn't you say so?

        Because affordability has nothing to do with national security which is the core topic is (China chip ban) is about.

        If they could have, they would have.

        Past performance is no example of the future. The USA used to be the kings of this stuff. Instead they are now lagging behind several other countries with foreign companies having the tech crown in semiconductor manufacturing.
        Your post reminded me of a family conversation we had a decade ago, grandpa mocking Japanese cars for the unreliable pieces of shit they were. He said something similar t

        • Your post reminded me of a family conversation we had a decade ago, grandpa mocking Japanese cars for the unreliable pieces of shit they were. He said something similar to "if the japs could be a reliable car they would have". He was a bit bemused when my father (and all of his siblings) agreed in unison that Toyotas were far more reliable than Volkswagons at this point.

          There's literally no point at which Toyotas sold into the US were less reliable than the VWs sold into the US, so I'm really not clear on what you or your grandfather have been smoking, but keep it away from me.

          China wouldn't be mad about not being able to buy advanced process technology if they could make it themselves on a useful timescale. QED, they can't do it.

    • Lack of efficiency makes for a major cost disadvantage to the user, which will be an impediment in selling your stuff. And energy is a fungible good. Especially Europe has an international energy exchange and a common energy market. Huawei would in effect throw away money on that front if they deliver energy to extra cheap prices to their chip customers.

      But perhaps that is the true goal of US sanctions:
      Hamper Chinese competition in international markets. That would have nothing immediate to do with national

    • by JeffOz ( 7681870 )
      Finally someone has a sense. I hope the US congress people can hear arguments along yours.
      • Finally someone has a sense. I hope the US congress people can hear arguments along yours.

        No way. It's against their political marketing mandate. The US political system is a "democratic" system. Therefore, the foremost thing for any politician to do in order to win the votes are to demonstrate their determination [merriam-webster.com] and "capability" prominently. There is nothing better than fabricating and hyping up a big enemy and take aggressive actions.

  • repeat what someone has done?

    Could not barbarians copy and improve Roman Empire tactics? Could not other countries repeat Manhattan project? Or human flight in space?

    What makes computer chips so special to hope that Chinese fail to figure out how to make them? Chinese among all. We live in a civilization defined by Chinese inventions: paper, powder, printing press, silk, rockets, etc. Isn't it a bit naive?

    In my opinion, a better approach to solve international tensions and mistrust is to be develop
    • What makes computer chips so special to hope that Chinese fail to figure out how to make them?

      You seem to be under the impression they haven't been trying. Why do you imagine this?

      What makes computer chips so special to hope that Chinese fail to figure out how to make them? Chinese among all. We live in a civilization defined by Chinese inventions: paper, powder, printing press, silk, rockets, etc. Isn't it a bit naive?

      How many years has it been since those examples? Now name a newer one that wasn't in collaboration with another nation. GLWT

  • by Meneth ( 872868 ) on Friday December 16, 2022 @04:44AM (#63134734)

    The threat to the US is not China having access to these chips, but China manufacturing these chips.

    Their conflict is largely measured by how much the rest of the world is trade-dependent on Chinese products.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

Working...