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2024 m. balandžio 13 d., šeštadienis

China Targets U.S. Chip Makers With Edict for Telecom Carriers

 

"SINGAPORE -- China's push to replace foreign technology is now focused on cutting American chip makers out of the country's telecommunications systems.

Officials earlier this year directed the nation's largest telecom carriers to phase out foreign processors that are core to their networks by 2027, a move that would hit American chip giants Intel and Advanced Micro Devices, people familiar with the matter said.

The deadline given by China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology aims to accelerate efforts by Beijing to halt the use of such core chips in its telecom infrastructure. The regulator ordered state-owned mobile operators to inspect their networks for the prevalence of non-Chinese semiconductors and draft timelines to replace them, the people said.

In the past, efforts to get the industry to wean itself off foreign semiconductors have been hindered by the lack of good domestically made chips. Chinese telecom carriers' procurements show they are switching more to domestic alternatives, a move made possible in part because local chips' quality has improved and their performance has become more stable, the people said.

Such an effort would hit Intel and AMD the hardest, they said. The two chip makers have in recent years provided the bulk of the core processors used in networking equipment in China and the world.

Shares of Intel closed down 5.2% to $35.69 on Friday, while AMD fell 4.2% to $163.28.

China's MIIT, which oversees the regulation of the wireless, broadcasting and communication industries, didn't respond to a request for comment. China Mobile and China Telecom, the nation's two biggest telecom carriers by revenue, also didn't respond. Intel declined to comment. AMD didn't respond to requests for comment.

Beijing's desire to wean China off American chips where there are homemade alternatives is the latest installment of a U.S.-China technology war that is splintering the global landscape for network equipment, semiconductors and the internet. American lawmakers have banned Chinese telecom equipment over national-security concerns and have restricted U.S. chip companies including AMD and Nvidia from selling their high-end artificial-intelligence chips to China.

Chinese authorities have in turn been pushing for years to remove foreign suppliers from critical supply chains, seeking to source products from grains to semiconductors locally as national-security concerns rise. Similar orders requiring Chinese state-linked entities to shift their buying to local tech alternatives have resulted in U.S. software and hardware firms including Microsoft and Dell Technologies gradually losing their grip on the market, The Wall Street Journal has reported.

China has also issued procurement guidelines discouraging government agencies and state-owned companies from purchasing laptops and desktop computers containing Intel and AMD chips. Requirements released in March give the Chinese entities eight options for central processing units, or CPUs, they can choose from. AMD and Intel were listed as the last two options, behind six homegrown CPUs.

Computers with the Chinese chips installed are preapproved for state buyers. Those powered by Intel and AMD chips require a security evaluation with a government agency, which hasn't certified any foreign CPUs to date. Making chips for PCs is a significant source of sales for the two companies.

China Mobile and China Telecom are also key customers of both chip makers in China, buying thousands of servers for their data centers in the country's mushrooming cloud-computing market. These servers are also critical to telecommunications equipment working with base stations and storing mobile subscribers' data, often viewed as the "brains" of the network.

The two chip giants have the lion's share of the overall global market for CPUs used in servers, according to data from industry researcher TrendForce. In 2024, Intel will likely hold 71% of the market, while AMD will have 23%, TrendForce estimates. The researcher doesn't break out China data.

China's localization policies could diminish Intel and AMD's sales in the country, one of the most important markets for semiconductor firms. China is Intel's largest market, accounting for 27% of the company's revenue last year, Intel said in its latest annual report in January. The U.S. is its second-largest market. Its customers also include global electronics makers that manufacture in China.

Intel said in January that $3.2 billion, or 6% of its revenue in 2023, was dependent on U.S. government export control authorization, an amount the company expected may increase in future years.

China contributed 15% of AMD's revenue last year, according to the company's annual report. That was down from 22% in 2022 after AMD was restricted by U.S. authorities from selling its high-end AI chips to China." [1]

Since chips are important in today's warfare, this will affect US preparations in this area. Any American sanctions against the big players are always backfiring, that's true. Missing in this discussion are Snowden's data about American surveillance of Chinese communications using American technology though. That was a big factor starting this story. 

1.  China Targets U.S. Chip Makers With Edict for Telecom Carriers. Lin, Liza.  Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y.. 13 Apr 2024: A.1.

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