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BRUSSELS \u2014 The Netherlands on Friday started enforcing new export controls restrictions on advanced microchips production machines to China, siding with Washington in the geopolitical tussle over who controls the critical technology.<\/p>\n
The export controls, part of a three-way deal between the United States, Netherlands and Japan at the start of the year<\/a>, affect advanced microchips printing equipment. “Uncontrolled export [of the equipment] can have risks for the public security,” the Dutch regulation said<\/a>. <\/p>\n The Dutch rules come in support of a U.S.-led strategy to choke off China from critical parts of the supply chain needed to manufacture high-end microchips used in consumer electronics, computing and other domains \u2014 including military applications. “It’s necessary to check in advance who’s the end user and what the end use is of the production equipment,” the Dutch advocate in the regulation.<\/p>\n But the measures also put a target on the back of Dutch semiconductor champion ASML \u2014 Europe’s highest-valued tech company with a market value of around \u20ac240 billion \u2014 and have caused critics in Europe to accuse the Dutch government of bowing to U.S. pressure too easily.<\/p>\n ASML already faced restrictions on the export of its most advanced machines, which use extreme ultraviolet light (EUV). The new rules require the company to apply for a permit for at least three types of its machines<\/a> that use less advanced deep ultraviolet (DUV). The government expects about 20 annual applications in total for a permit because of the additional DUV restrictions. <\/p>\n The Dutch decision to align export controls policy with Washington and Tokyo has sidelined other European Union member countries and Europe’s own chips industry in past months. <\/p>\n The rules don’t seem to bite in the short term: ASML didn’t change its financial outlook for this year, nor its “longer-term scenarios.”\u00a0Part of the explanation there is that ASML was still granted the necessary licenses it needed until the end of the year, an ASML spokesperson said Thursday, allowing the company to “fulfill contractual obligations.” The company added though that it was “unlikely” to receive export licences for Chinese customers from January onward.<\/p>\n But the company is fully aware that restrictions to the Chinese market out of security concerns could become a slippery slope, threatening its unique position in a global \u2014 and highly efficient \u2014 supply chain. <\/p>\n Decoupling between the West and China will be “extremely difficult and extremely expensive,” Christophe Fouquet, the company’s executive vice president, said<\/a> in June. Earlier, ASML CEO Peter Wennink said<\/a> that putting “locks” on the global chips ecosystem would have “far-reaching consequences.” <\/p>\n It could also incite China to accelerate its own production ecosystem for advanced chips \u2014 something that has not been sufficiently taken into consideration, according to critics of the export restrictions.<\/p>\nDecoupling will be ‘extremely expensive’<\/h3>\n