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China’s SMIC Beats Sanctions to Make 7nm Chips – TechInsights

The discovery has big implications for Chinese chip companies, as it “helps reduce China’s reliance on Western technologies” at a time when it was restricted by US sanctions, the report said


Shares in Chinese chipmakers and tech giants fell on Monday, after US export control measures announced late last week.
Shares of SMIC, which is China's largest chipmaker, were down 4% at the close of trading in Hong Kong on Monday. Reuters file image.

 

China’s largest chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC) is now producing more advanced products, according to a report by TechInsights, which said it appeared to have produced a 7-nanometre chip “that incorporates scaled logic and memory bitcells.”

The Shanghai-based SMIC, which Washington put on the Department of Commerce’s Entity List in late 2020 because of concerns it had ties to the Chinese military, “appears to have used 7nm technology to manufacture the MinerVa Bitcoin Miner system on chip,” the report said, adding that this “has key implications for Chinese chip companies, as it helps to reduce China’s reliance on Western technologies during this time of restricted access.”

Read the full report: TechInsights.

 

 

 

ALSO SEE:

China Chip Maker’s Profit Soars as Revenue Hits a Record

China’s SMIC To Pump $8.87 Billion Into New Shanghai Chip Plant

 

US to Consult Allies Over Ban on Sales to China’s SMIC

 

Prominent US Politicians Demand Tighter SMIC Export Restrictions

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

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