Report: Huawei plans to start manufacturing its own chips although it will not be the solution to its problems
Huawei has tried to skate around the U.S. export rules, but even China's largest foundry, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) is of no help. That's because the most advanced process node it can use to produce chips is currently 14nm. The new 5nm process packs 171.3 million transistors into a square mm; compare that to the 43 million transistors per square mm found inside chips manufactured using the 14nm process node. And remember that the more transistors employed by a chip, the more powerful and energy efficient it is.
By the end of next year, Huawei hopes to build chips for the Internet of things that will use the 28nm process node. By late 2022, the company plans to manufacture 20nm chips for 5G telecommunications. At this pace though, making its own chips will not help Huawei's immediate problem obtaining cutting-edge chips for its flagship phones. Because it has never owned a chip fab before, Huawei will turn to Shanghai IC R&D Center to run the factory. This is a research company owned by the government of Shanghai.
What Huawei is doing by building its own foundry is something that the entire country of China is looking to accomplish. In a five-year plan, China laid out its desire to be more self sufficient when it comes to its economy. That includes not having to rely on foreign countries to source key technology. If Huawei's problems with the U.S. have taught China something, it's that you are always leaving yourself open to some problem when you don't control production of core technology needed for your products.
The U.S. considers Huawei to be a national security threat due to its alleged ties to the Communist Chinese government. The fear is that Huawei's phones and networking equipment contain backdoors that allow the company to collect information on American consumers and corporations and sends it to a server in Beijing. This has been denied countless times by Huawei and so far no evidence of this has ever been obtained by the U.S. government.
Meanwhile, the company remained the second largest smartphone manufacturer in the world during the third quarter. And the firm is also the largest purveyor of networking equipment gear globally.
November 02, 2020 at 02:13AM
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Fab news for Huawei won't have it rolling in the chips - PhoneArena
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