Tech war: China's flagship CPU designer Loongson puts on a brave face amid US sanctions

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A Chinese chip designer, whose mission has been to reduce the country's reliance on Intel and AMD, is trying to develop its own general-purpose graphic processing unit (GPU) despite being added to a US trade blacklist.

Loongson Technology Corp, whose founder Hu Weiwu used to cite Mao Zedong to express his aspirations, is evaluating the advanced 7-nanometre process from a number of foundries to manufacture its future chips, according to a response from the company this week to investor questions.

The new chips would include GPUs like those supplied by industry leader Nvidia, which is now restricted from selling its high-end chips to Chinese customers, and central processing units (CPUs), which is a market long-dominated by Intel and AMD.

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The Loongson comments come a week after the Beijing-based chip designer, whose Chinese name translates to "dragon chips", was added by the US Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) to the Entity List, along with 26 other mainland entities. US exporters must apply for special permits from Washington to sell products to companies on the list.

For Shanghai-listed Loongson, however, its stated mission has always been reducing China's reliance on US technologies. As investors flooded the official inquiry platform run by the Shanghai Stock Exchange with questions on its product development and the impact of US sanctions, Loongson said the latest restrictions will not have any "material impact", according to publicly-available records.

The US sanctions on Loongson are less extensive than what the US imposed on Chinese telecoms giant Huawei Technologies Co, but the chip designer's efforts to procure foundry services could be undermined if US-origin technologies are used in the manufacturing processes, analysts said.

"If a fabless company has no access to the best process nodes, why bother designing cutting edge chips," said Stewart Randall, head of electronics and embedded software at consultancy Intralink.

Loongson launched its home-grown 3A5000 central processing unit (CPU) at the end of 2020, which was made on a now-restricted process node of 14-nm, according to its prospectus for a Shanghai initial public offering last year, in which it raised 2.46 billion yuan (US$357 million).

This photo dated Oct. 24, 2013, shows Loongson founder Hu Weiwu delivering a speech at Huazhong University of Science and Technology in Wuhan, Hubei province. Photo: Imaginechina via AFP alt=This photo dated Oct. 24, 2013, shows Loongson founder Hu Weiwu delivering a speech at Huazhong University of Science and Technology in Wuhan, Hubei province. Photo: Imaginechina via AFP>