Semiconductors

Semiconductors are crucial to many of China’s strategic goals: digitalizing the economy, boosting high-tech exports such as electric vehicles (EVs) and solar panels, and developing modern weapons. With its state-led “Big Fund,” China has invested more than CNY 686 billion (EUR 87.5 billion) into the industry since 2014, in addition to local government support and private investment. 

Indigenizing the semiconductor industry has gained urgency, as US sanctions and export controls have cut off access to advanced semiconductors critical for development in AI, military and other fields. 

Since the US sanctioned the telecoms giant Huawei in 2019, Huawei has quietly become the central force in the state’s effort to develop homegrown chips, alongside other companies. China is a major producer of semiconductors using older manufacturing technology and is a leader in backend processes – chip assembling, testing, and packaging. But it lags in making advanced semiconductors and lacks the tools to manufacture them. US export controls have cut off access to critical foreign-made equipment.

Nevertheless, leading manufacturer SMIC has produced an advanced 7nm smartphone chip and a line of AI chips, both for Huawei. Taiwan’s TSMC, the world’s leading semiconductor contract manufacturer, first pioneered a 7nm process in 2018 (has since produced several rounds of further innovations), suggesting SMIC lags by roughly five years. However, China’s lack of access to Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography (EUV) machines, essential for making advanced semiconductors and exclusively produced by the Netherlands’ ASML, may hamper further progress.  

Graphics dashboard

China's production of integrated circuits has almost doubled since 2018
China's production of integrated circuits has almost doubled since 2018

China’s IC production has almost doubled since 2019. Notably, consumption of ICs is still growing more quickly than production, even though this has expanded significantly. In 2024, China’s exports of semiconductors also grew 30 percent year over year. While China struggles with shortages in high-end GPUs needed for AI development, other segments could be oversaturated shortly.

Semiconductors in China: Timeline of crucial events

Development
Policy/regulation

The US adds Huawei and its subsidiaries to the Entity List, restricting exports to them. This impacts Huawei's supply chain, with 33 of its 92 core suppliers based in the US.

US applies Foreign Direct Product Rule to Huawei, blocking its technology access globally. Companies are barred from using US technology (mainly semiconductors) to supply Huawei.

Top Chinese scientist suggests China use open-source RISC-V chip design architecture to overcome Western sanctions, and create an ecosystem around “RISC-X” in Belt and Road countries.

US expands export controls on advanced semiconductors and manufacturing equipment, restricting tech specs of chips and including arms-embargoed countries.

Huawei and SMIC release Kirin 9000S, a 7nm 5G chip for Huawei's latest high-end smart phone – even after US export controls blocked equipment considered necessary to make such chips.

Second tranche of Big Fund raises CNY 2 trillion (EUR 25.6 billion) to support Chinese semiconductor industry – beyond just fabs – to create an ecosystem for making semiconductors in China.

COVID-19 severely disrupts supply chains for automotive chips. Car companies must cut output due to the shortage. Chinese chip companies evolve to meet the demand of its auto industry.

US institutes country-wide semiconductor export controls, a major policy shift that restricts all of China’s access to "chokepoint" technologies, not just certain entities.

Third phase of China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund (Big Fund III) raises CNY 3.4 trillion (EUR 44.3 billion) from state-owned investors for semiconductor industry, the largest to date.

Noteworthy

Technology progress

  • A team at Beida published a new way to grow crystals for semiconductors in the international science magazine “Science.”. (Source: S&T Daily, July 7)
     

Domestic dynamics

  • China’s government is urging domestic automakers to purchase 25% of their chips locally by 2025. While these guidelines are not mandatory, they follow a line of announcements to that effect, including Xi Jinping asking a company CEO whether he already sources his chips domestically (Source: EETimes, May 17)
  • The third tranche of the Big Fund is starting to invest. First investments went to Hua Hong Semiconductors, while strategically, the fund will invest more in AI-relevant chips. (Source: Zhidx, 36kr, June 9)
     

International involvement

  • After Nvidia again revamped its China offerings to follow US export controls in 2023, Chinese companies are now choosing domestic offerings more frequently. Huawei, Baidu Kunlun and Moore Thread are all offering chips that are cheaper, while still being good enough. (Source: Caijing, Caijing, July 8)
  • More than 50% of Japanese semiconductor manufacturing equipment exports go to China. Surrounding US export restrictions, Chinese companies have ramped up buying of semiconductor manufacturing companies, to prepare for possible stricter controls in the future. (Source: 36kr, June 12)

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