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ASML denies US government report that its EUV chipmaking tool was shipped to China — says 'rumors' are 'inaccurate and damaging to our reputation'

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Why This Matters

ASML has publicly denied allegations that its EUV lithography systems have been shipped to China, emphasizing that such claims are inaccurate and harm its reputation. This dispute highlights ongoing tensions between the U.S. government and semiconductor equipment manufacturers over export restrictions and national security concerns. The situation underscores the complexities of enforcing export controls in the global chip industry, which impacts supply chains and technological leadership.

Key Takeaways

ASML has told Tom's Hardware that claims one of its extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography systems has ended up in China despite export restrictions is both inaccurate and damaging to its reputation. It follows a report that Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick questions senior leadership, concerned that one of the machines had ended up in China in breach of export restrictions.

The company is refuting a recent report claiming the U.S. government believes that one of ASML's extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography systems may have somehow reached China despite export restrictions, according to Bloomberg, citing sources familiar with negotiations between the U.S. officials and ASML executives. ASML denies any wrongdoing and claims that it knows the location of every EUV tool it has ever built.

The issue reportedly emerged during meetings between U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and ASML executives. According to people familiar with the discussions cited by Bloomberg, Lutnick questioned whether an EUV system may have found its way into China. Such a development would represent a major breach of export controls because, under the Wassenaar Arrangement, ASML can not ship EUV lithography equipment to Chinese customers. In fact, the only EUV tool that China-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC) has bought remains in the Netherlands. As a result, ASML calls the accusations 'unfounded' and 'damaging.'

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"In recent years, ASML has refuted several unfounded rumors regarding non-compliance with export controls concerning China which were inaccurate and damaging to our reputation," a spokesperson for ASML told Tom's Hardware.

The U.S. government has not publicly produced evidence that a complete EUV scanner is operating in China. Yet, several senior administration officials told Bloomberg that they possess information indicating that ASML exported equipment associated with EUV systems, including specialized systems used to 'transport EUV machines.' Those officials declined to disclose any evidence, citing sensitivity concerns.

"ASML has never shipped an EUV machine to China, nor have we shipped to China any component, module or equipment specially designed to be used in an EUV machine," the spokesperson told us.

An ASML EUV scanner is made of 100,000 components and weighs 180 tons. It is transported only by air on multiple planes, and it would be impossible to intercept such a shipment without causing an international scandal. Meanwhile, given the complexity of the machine, it is impossible to build one using spare or scrap parts or reverse engineer it using its components, as we reported back in December.

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Bloomberg claims that ASML has circulated an internal presentation titled 'No indication of any ASML EUV System in China,' which reportedly states there are 314 EUV systems currently operating worldwide and another 26 that have been retired. According to the document, none are located in China. The presentation further notes that EUV scanners continuously communicate with ASML, so the company can detect interruptions, abnormal activity, or connectivity issues. In addition, customers cannot simply dismantle, transport, and reinstall an EUV scanner without direct assistance from ASML due to specialized logistics and handling requirements.

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