TAIPEI: Taiwan has added China’s Huawei Technologies and Semiconductor Manufactu ring International Corp (SMIC) to its export control list, which includes other proscribed organisations like the Taliban and al Qaeda.
Inclusion on the economy ministry’s trade administration’s strategic high-tech commodities entity list means Taiwanese companies will need government approval before exporting any products to the companies.
The companies, both at the centre of China’s chip and artificial intelligence (AI) ambitions, were included in an updated version of the ministry’s trade administration’s website. Neither company responded to requests for comment outside of office hours at the weekend.
In a statement on Sunday, the ministry’s trade administration said it had recently held a meeting to review the entity list, and “based on the prevention of arms proliferation and other national security considerations” updated it on June 10.
A total of 601 entities were added, including Huawei and SMIC, along with entities from Russia, Pakistan, Iran, Myanmar, and China, it said.
“Manufacturers must comply with export control regulations, fulfil their verification obligations and carefully assess transaction risks,” it added.
Taiwan is home to TSMC, the world’s largest contract chipmaker and a major supplier of chips to AI darling Nvidia. Both Huawei and SMIC have been working hard to catch up in the chip technology race.
Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory despite the strong objections of Taipei’s government, already has tight chip export controls when it comes to Taiwanese companies either manufacturing in the country or supplying Chinese firms.