Plans by US chipmaker Nvidia to sell technology to China’s Huawei may be at risk if the US government restricts further shipments to the company.
Huawei is already blocked from received advanced chip technology from US companies and the Biden administration has been looking at reducing the amount of items it allows US companies to send to the Chinese tech giant.
Huawei Technologies was added to a US trade blacklist in 2019 but which continues to receive billions in US goods under a special plan implemented by the Trump administration.
“The proposed 2023 amendment of (the Commerce Department’s) licensing will likely have a high economic impact on Nvidia,” according to excerpts of the draft report that refers to the company’s “pending licence value.”
Nvidia’s plans to sell to Huawei have not been previously reported.
A Nvidia spokesperson declined to comment on the document, saying: “The China market presents a significant opportunity for the US semiconductor industry. While we are unable to comment on any pending licence requests, we work with customers and partners worldwide to comply with all applicable export controls and meet market demand.”
A senior State Department Official said the document was a preliminary draft prepared by a contractor, and the department “would not have approved of the report in its current form.”
It also said the government “has written and contracted multiple reports on this subject, based on different contingencies, which arrive at very different conclusions.”
The White House and Commerce Department declined to comment. Huawei did not respond to a request for comment.
The document shows the Biden administration is seeking to assess the impact on US companies of proposed Huawei policy changes before imposing new rules that could crimp projected revenue streams at a time when the tech industry is already reeling.
It also provides unusual insight into the politically sensitive question of which US companies are seeking business ties to Huawei, one of Washington’s most penalized Chinese companies.
Reuters was unable to learn the details of the specific policy change whose impact was being assessed in the report.
The report suggested Qualcomm would likely suffer a “moderate economic impact” from the change in policy, in contrast to Huawei. Indeed, the loss of access to Qualcomm’s modem chips would have a bigger impact on Huawei, the report forecast, since Huawei “relies heavily on Qualcomm’s modem chips to support its smart phone offering.”
Qualcomm did not respond to a request for comment.
In 2021 there were reports that US officials approved licence applications worth hundreds of millions of dollars for Huawei to buy chips for its growing auto component business, including vehicle components such as video screens and sensors, as trade restrictions crippled other business lines.
Huawei was placed on the Entity List in 2019 amid fears it could spy on Americans and allegations it was stealing intellectual property and violating sanctions.
The US requires that suppliers seek a special licence that is usually denied when selling US goods to companies on the list. But the Trump administration instituted a more lenient policy for Huawei, blocking its access to 5G chips but allowing other items like 4G chips to be shipped to the firm.
The Commerce Department’s top export controls official, Alan Estevez, said this week the Trump-era policy allowing US technology below the “5G level” to be shipped to Huawei was “under assessment.”
But sources say there are differences within the administration odds over how far to go: some officials advocate blocking all licences to Huawei suppliers and revoking existing authorisations, while others want to extend restrictions only to 4G chips and other targeted technologies going forward.
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