Saturday, 25 May 2024 18:31

ASML and TSMC Can Disable Chip Machines Featured

ASML has reassured officials about its ability to remotely disable its chipmaking machines, Bloomberg reports.

 (Bloomberg) -- ASML Holding and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) have ways to disable the world’s most sophisticated chipmaking machines, according to people familiar with the matter.

Spokespeople for ASML, TSMC and the Dutch trade ministry declined to comment. Spokespeople for the White House National Security Council, US Department of Defense and US Department of Commerce didn’t respond to emailed requests for comment. 

The remote shut-off applies to Netherlands-based ASML’s line of extreme ultraviolet machines, known within the industry as EUVs, for which TSMC is its single biggest client. EUVs harness high-frequency light waves to print the smallest microchip transistors in existence — creating chips that have artificial-intelligence uses as well as more sensitive military applications. 

About the size of a city bus, an EUV requires regular servicing and updates. As part of that, the company can remotely force a shut-off which would act as a kill switch, the people said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The Veldhoven-based company is the world’s only manufacturer of these machines, which sell for more than 200 million EU dollars(217 million US dollars) apiece.

ASML’s technology has long been subject to government interventions. The Netherlands prohibits the company from selling EUV machines to China, for instance, because of US fears they could lend its rival an edge in the global chip war.  

It was at the behest of the US that the Dutch began this year to halt exports of ASML’s next-most sophisticated chipmaking machines. Even before that ban took effect, US officials had asked ASML to cancel some previously scheduled shipments to Chinese customers, Bloomberg News reported.

The company expects as much as 15% of this year’s sales to China will be affected by the latest export-control measures. 

Evidence suggests the restrictions may have come too late to stem Chinese advances. Huawei Technologies Company last year produced a smartphone to rival Apple Inc.’s iPhone using chips made with older ASML printers in combination with tools from two US suppliers, Bloomberg News reported in October after conducting a break-down of the phone. 

Beijing has made technological self-sufficiency a national priority and Huawei’s efforts to advance domestic chip design and manufacture have received government backing.

The US Congress last month approved 8 billion dollars in aid to enhance the island’s defenses. The Biden administration is also looking to boost semiconductor production on American soil, promising 39 billion dollars in grants to chipmakers to hedge against any future supply-chain disruption.

The EUV machine has helped turn ASML into Europe’s most valuable tech stock with a market capitalization topping 370 billion dollars — more than double that of its client Intel Corp.

ASML has shipped more than 200 of these machines to clients outside China since they were first developed in 2016, with TSMC snatching up more of them than any other chipmaker. 

EUVs require such frequent upkeep that without ASML’s spare parts they quickly stop working, the people said. On-site maintenance of the EUVs poses a challenge because they’re housed in clean rooms that require engineers to wear special suits to avoid contamination. 

ASML offers certain customers joint service contracts where they do some of the routine maintenance themselves, allowing clients like TSMC to access their own machines’ system. ASML says it can’t access its customers’ proprietary data. 

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