Dutch Commerce Minister Sjoerd Sjoerdsma visited Washington this week to fulfill with Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and members of Congress to oppose the MATCH Act, a invoice that will bar Chinese language chipmakers from accessing Western semiconductor tools, and one that will hit ASML particularly laborious.
ASML, based mostly within the Netherlands, is Europe’s most respected firm and the one maker on the earth of the subtle lithography machines which can be used to make cutting-edge AI chips.
“It’s distinctive that I’m coming right here to broadly define our issues to Congress,” Sjoerdsma told Bloomberg after the conferences. “The stakes for the Netherlands could also be very excessive.”
China accounts for 19% of ASML’s internet system gross sales. The MATCH Act would go additional than present controls, extending curbs to ASML’s deep ultraviolet immersion machines on high of the long-standing ban on its most superior excessive ultraviolet, or EUV, instruments reaching China.
As ASML CEO Christophe Fouquet told TechCrunch in Could, what China can at present purchase are older-generation deep ultraviolet instruments — gear first shipped a couple of decade in the past — the identical machines the MATCH Act would now relegate off limits.
The invoice, launched in April, hasn’t but confronted a full Home or Senate vote; Bloomberg notes it could possible should be folded into a bigger package deal to move.
