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March 27, 2024, 6:47 p.m.
China's president says it doesn't need ASML — tells Dutch PM it will continue with advanced technological progress regardless
China's president says it doesn't need ASML — tells Dutch PM it will continue with advanced technological progress regardless
['China', 'us', 'advanced', 'tool', 'technology']

China's President Xi Jinping still wants the Netherlands to stop following American export restrictions, but he also said that continuing to do so would not stop the nation's progress.

China's president says it doesn't need ASML — tells Dutch PM it will continue with advanced technological progress regardless

Chinese President Xi Jinping told Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte at a recent meeting that efforts to limit China's access to technological advancements would not deter the nation's progress. This discussion came after the Netherlands imposed export controls on advanced chipmaking tools in alignment with U.S. efforts to restrict China's access to advanced technology out of concern for national security, according to a report by the Associated Press. "The Chinese people also have the right to legitimate development, and no force can stop the pace of China's scientific and technological development and progress," Xi said. The Netherlands' decision to enforce export licensing on ASML's lithography equipment - which can be used to make logic chips using 14nm and more advanced process technology - is a big deal for China's semiconductor makers such as SMIC and YMTC. SMIC recently partnered with Huawei to produce 7nm-class smartphone processor using ASML's advanced deep ultraviolet litho tools and the two companies are reportedly working on making 5nm-class chips, using these machines. The ongoing tension between the U.S. and China over technology access have led China to accuse the U.S. of hindering its economic development. The U.S. does not want to China to have access to high-performance processors that could be used for artificial intelligence and high-performance computing applications, as powerful supercomputers could be used to develop China's military capabilities, as well as weapons of mass destruction. The People's Republic badly needs sophisticated homegrown lithography equipment to enable its chip manufacturers to fabricate chips using even relatively advanced process technologies, such as 14nm. The country is making some progress with domestic lithography tools: Shanghai Micro Electronics Equipment, China's most advanced lithography scanner manufacturer, reportedly introduced its first 28nm-capable tool last year, but it is unclear whether the company can produce such machines in volumes.

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