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Huawei touts new chipmaking technology to sidestep US restrictions

Emma Reilly by Emma Reilly
May 26, 2026
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Sanctions since 2019 have cut Huawei's access to components and technologies made by the United States and some of its allies. ©AFP

Shanghai (AFP) – Chinese tech giant Huawei said on Monday it had developed a new way of making semiconductors that could get around its US-enforced lack of access to the most advanced chipmaking equipment. Huawei has been at the centre of a geopolitical standoff in recent years after Washington warned its equipment could be used by the Chinese government for espionage, an allegation the firm denies. Sanctions since 2019 have cut Huawei’s access to components and technologies made by the United States and some of its allies — including the lithography machines used to make the world’s most advanced chips.

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However, the head of Huawei’s semiconductor division, He Tingbo, said on Monday that the company will be able to produce chips equivalent to next-generation 1.4-nanometre (1.4nm) ones by 2031. Taiwan’s TSMC, the industry leader, has projected it will be able to do the same by 2028. Cutting-edge chips that can train and power artificial intelligence systems are a crucial and highly sensitive element of the technology rivalry between the United States and China. The computing power of chips has increased dramatically over the decades as makers cram them with more microscopic electronic components.

Huawei’s announcement suggests it might have sidestepped the need for extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) machines, which have been considered crucial for mass manufacturing chips of 5nm or under. “Over the past six years, I have often been asked…how did you survive and come back on top?” He said in a presentation to the International Symposium on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS) in Shanghai. She said the new technique came about through a shift in how chipmaking has been conceptualised historically.

“Moore’s Law,” a principle developed by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, states that the number of transistors — devices regulating the flow of electricity — on a chip doubles every two years. A higher density of transistors results in a smaller chip or one the same size with faster processing power. He proposed on Monday “the Tau Scaling Law,” or “Her’s Law,” by which instead of optimising for space, designers optimise for the time taken for the various elements making up a chip to communicate. This overcomes a key challenge facing Moore’s Law that Intel sums up as: “You can make something smaller and smaller and smaller…until you can’t.”

US sanctions have meant that “these challenges arrived earlier and are tougher” for Huawei, He said. “Our solution is feasible and affordable. The performance of the new chip can fully compete with that of the other path,” she said. Huawei’s next iteration of its Kirin chip, set to launch in the autumn, will be the first to fully adopt an architecture called “LogicFolding” based on the new principle, the company said.

“Over the past six years, there was a period when I felt quite frustrated, as if there was really no way out,” He told reporters after the ISCAS presentation. But she said she had been inspired by “a masterpiece of engineering,” southwestern China’s Dujiangyan irrigation system that was originally constructed around 256 BC. She said she realised she was just facing problems others would come across 10 years later.

“I can confidently say in the coming 10 years our solutions for mobile computing and AI computing will be competitive,” He told reporters. But she acknowledged that obstacles remained in scaling up — not least the necessity for new design tools and the challenges of overheating. The Tau Scaling Law “underscores the company’s ambition to lead rather than follow in the global chip race,” said George Chen, Partner and Chair of Digital Practice at The Asia Group. “Even without a new product launch today, Huawei’s intent is clear — and its trajectory will likely heighten US concerns.”

© 2024 AFP

Tags: Chinageopoliticssemiconductors
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