Huawei to launch phone with Kirin 9000 chips

Beijing: Huawei has a stockpile of about 10 million Kirin 9000 chips that will support shipments for about half a year, one telecom expert said, as the “deadline” for production of the Kirin 9000 is drawing near after the US government moved to block shipments of semiconductors to Huawei Technologies from global chipmakers.
Richard Yu Chengdong, chief executive of Huawei’s consumer business group, disclosed recently that Huawei plans to launch its smartphone equipment with Kirin smartphone chips, but only in “limited numbers.” He also confirmed that production of the chip will stop after September 15 due to US sanctions. This has left the market guessing about the soon-to-be launched Mate 40 series, which is expected to be Huawei’s last smartphone to carry Kirin chips. There have also been worries as to when Huawei will run out of Kirin 9000 chips and what solutions it will have. Huang Haifeng, a veteran high-tech observer, said that based on his knowledge, Huawei’s Kirin 9000 chip supplier, Taiwan-based TSMC, is working “day and night” to produce the chips for Huawei. The company earlier confirmed that it will stop shipping semiconductors to Huawei after mid-September to comply with the US sanctions.
“Huawei has about 10 million Kirin 9000 chips on hand, which means that about 10 million Mate40/Pro phones installed with the chip will be available, and I believe they will sell out very quickly,” Huang told the Global Times on Sunday. However, how Huawei’s business, particularly high-end phones, will progress is uncertain after the US government cut its supplies as a way of cracking down on Chinese tech companies. In 2019, the US government put Huawei on its Entity List, which requires US companies to obtain a license to export domestically produced chips and software to the company. Later, the Trump administration banned global chipmakers from shipping US technology-based semiconductors to Huawei Technologies. “It’s a lesson for Chinese companies that have only focused on design in the process of globalization. Now the only problem we face is production, as Huawei can’t produce the chips by itself,” Yu said, new.qq.com reported on Saturday.
Huang said it’s highly probable that Huawei will be forced to halt selling its high-end mobile phones under the US ban, as it’s not easy for it to find alternative suppliers that can mass produce high-end chips without US technologies. According to Huang, taking a lesson from Huawei’s challenges, the Chinese government should ramp up efforts to support domestic chip makers, rolling out favorable policies like tax cuts or even making hard rules such as telling domestic phone companies to use made-in-China chips in some of their products.
– The Daily Mail-Global
Times News exchange item