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ASML Started Limiting Chip Gear Exports To China

Image credit : ASML

ASML Started Limiting Chip Gear Exports To China

At at June, the Netherlands issued an unprecedented export control restricting ASML Holding NV’s chip-making machines from being sent to China.

Source: Techwire Asia


Although the export control, effective 1 September 2023, does not explicitly mention China, the rules state that ASML – the only company in the world that makes highly sophisticated chip making machines – will have to apply for a license to ship its advanced deep ultraviolet lithography, or DUV, systems to China.

The move by the Dutch government was widely seen as an alignment with the US and Japan and is designed to restrict the shipments of three models of ASML machines to China, Bloomberg News reportedASML has been barred from selling EUV lithography machines to China since 2019, but it had been able to sell DUV systems until this year, amid escalating pressure from the US.

With the latest rules coming into effect, Chinese chip foundries have four more months to import ASML’s most advanced immersion deep ultraviolet (DUV) lithography system, Twinscan NXT:2000i, with approval from The Hague. That is, systems capable of making chips at the 5-nanometre process or more advanced.

The Dutch company will be able to continue shipments of some advanced machines this year, but on January 1, 2024, “it is unlikely we will receive export licenses for these systems for shipment to domestic Chinese customers,” it said on 1 September 2023. So far, China’s imports of Dutch lithography machines have surged this year, with the first seven months already surpassing ASML’s previous forecast for 2023 sales to China.

From January to July, Chinese imports of Dutch-made lithography machines, nearly all from ASML, grew 64.8% year-on-year to US$2.58 billion, Chinese semiconductor industry consultancy JW Insights said in a report, citing China customs data. In January, ASML projected that its sales to China this year would remain steady at around € 2.2 billion (US$2.36 billion), or 14% of its total annual revenue.

In July alone, China imported US$626 million worth of lithography machines from the Netherlands, nearly eight times more than it did in the same month last year, according to the report. The main reason for this spike is that ASML has a near monopoly on the world’s most advanced lithography machines, which are required to produce cutting-edge chips.

How Does The Chip Gear Export Control Impact China And ASML?

First and foremost, ASML is not only the largest European tech firm by market valuation but also the world’s only manufacturer of specific lithography systems, which are needed to print patterns of transistors on silicon wafers. Despite China’s accelerated drive to use more locally produced tools and critical components, semiconductor equipment procured in-country accounts for just 15% of the total at Chinese foundries, a top executive said at an industry conference this month. The other 85% of machines come from the US, the Netherlands, and Japan.

ASML has also been downplaying the potential impact on annual sales this year after beating estimates in H1 2023. It said in a prior statement that the measures will “not have a material effect on our financial outlook” for 2023 or in the longer term. 

China has, however, warned the Dutch government that there would be consequences if the government blocked the export of high-end chip making equipment to China.

Separately, since July, companies in Japan must obtain a license before they can sell 23 types of chip making equipment to China. Tokyo announced the controls in May, prompting the state-backed China Semiconductor Industry Association to warn of countermeasures.

With the leading manufacturer of photolithography equipment used in the semiconductor manufacturing process facing such a hurdle, it might potentially put many of its suppliers on alert. They include players in optical components, such as lenses and mirrors, extreme ultraviolet (EUV) light sources, and laser technologies.

 

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