Huawei Chairman: US Export Restrictions Have “Supercharged” China’s Semiconductor Industry
The current Rotating Chairman and Deputy Chairman of Huawei, Xu Zhijun, made a striking comment during a recent interview. He said Huawei is thankful for the pressure that the United States placed on the company and on China’s tech sector as a whole.
Xu made the remark while discussing Huawei’s new LogicFolding chip architecture. When asked how the company achieved the breakthrough, he pointed to years of outside pressure as a key reason.
“If the United States hadn’t forced our country, our companies, and our industry, we wouldn’t have done something like this,” Xu said. He added that U.S. restrictions pushed China’s semiconductor industry to grow faster and gain wider support.
Huawei has faced heavy U.S. restrictions since 2019. During President Donald Trump’s first term, the U.S. government placed Huawei on a trade blacklist. The move cut the company off from major American technology and blocked much of its access to the North American market.
The pressure grew in 2022 when President Joe Biden introduced export controls on advanced AI chips. These rules stopped Chinese firms from buying top hardware such as Nvidia’s A100 and H100 accelerators and AMD’s MI250 series.
Chipmakers tried to adjust. Nvidia and AMD built weaker versions of their products that met U.S. rules. Later, tighter restrictions reduced those options as well. At one stage, Nvidia faced a multibillion-dollar write-off linked to blocked sales into China.
The result changed the direction of China’s chip market.
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Many Chinese companies could no longer rely on American hardware. Some turned to gray markets and smuggling networks. Most did not. Instead, they looked inward and started buying local alternatives.
Chinese chip companies gained a larger customer base almost overnight. That brought in fresh revenue. More money meant more spending on research, engineering, and product development.
The gap with American technology remains clear. Chinese chips often use more power and still lag behind the best products from Nvidia and AMD in raw performance. Yet the market no longer looks one-sided.
Several Chinese firms now offer hardware that can compete in selected workloads. These products may not match the full software ecosystem behind Nvidia’s CUDA platform, but they give local companies a working option when foreign hardware is out of reach.
Government policy also played a major role.
Beijing has pushed hard for semiconductor independence. Chinese technology firms still want Nvidia hardware in many cases, largely because developers know CUDA and rely on its mature software stack. But government policy has pushed buyers toward domestic products.
Reports indicate that Chinese authorities instructed customs officials to block some advanced foreign AI chips. Restrictions have also extended into parts of the consumer graphics market.
This strategy reflects a larger goal: reduce dependence on foreign technology and build a supply chain that China controls.
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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has long warned that export bans could backfire. He argues that keeping American technology available around the world helps maintain U.S. influence. Remove that access, he says, and rivals will build their own systems.
Recent market trends appear to support that concern.
Nvidia once held an estimated 95 percent share of China’s AI accelerator market. That share has fallen sharply under export controls. At the same time, Chinese companies continue to train advanced AI models and release competitive systems, despite limited access to top American hardware.
The restrictions did slow Chinese AI development. Many analysts agree that the bans delayed progress by several years. But delay is not the same as defeat.
Pressure forced Chinese firms to invest in alternatives sooner than they might have otherwise. Engineers, suppliers, and investors moved faster because they had few other choices.
Huawei’s comments reflect this new reality. What began as an attempt to limit China’s technological rise may have also strengthened parts of its domestic ecosystem.
The long-term outcome remains uncertain. American firms still lead in advanced semiconductors, software tools, and manufacturing technology. China still faces major challenges in high-end chip production.
Yet one point has become harder to ignore: restrictions designed to slow China’s tech industry have also pushed it to build more of its own future.
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