Can China build its own ASML?

(nikkei.shorthandstories.com)

41 points | by pieterr 6 hours ago ago

69 comments

  • A_D_E_P_T 4 hours ago ago

    The answer is, of course, yes. What is there to stop them? Sure, it's difficult -- but where there's a will, and where the resources of China are involved, there is most assuredly a way.

    I remember when their cars were a joke, and when their cellphones were cheap trash. Now I don't think I'd buy a non-Chinese new car or cellphone, lol.

    • andy_ppp 4 hours ago ago

      The usual game plan of getting the technology they want to copy by offering cheap and highly skilled Chinese labour and access to the Chinese market by building the machines there is not available to them, so the likelihood is this will take longer and be more difficult than other implementations. There's hundreds of other technologies needed other than the lasers and the mirrors and the software and the experience running these machines at scale. I think to make more than a handful of GPUs they will be behind for at least 5 years.

      This doesn't mean they will always be behind though.

      If I was ASML I would have an AI generated honeypot of techniques that are plausible but incorrect for China to go after on this and make sure you get hacked by them.

    • chvid 3 hours ago ago

      "What is there to stop them?" Washington for sure is trying their very best and has so far been quite successful.

      • fauigerzigerk 3 hours ago ago

        The US has successfully stopped them from acquiring the machines. That's not the same as stopping them from acquiring the capability to make them. On the contrary.

      • defrost 3 hours ago ago

        ASML of the Netherlands agreed to go along with past US requests to not supply China with bleeding edge machines, so China is making do with the older models while working hard to break the non-US hardware monopoly.

        Washington, via the recent MATCH Act, has requested ASML to not supply or maintain any of the older equipment.

        ASML has travelled to Washington to tell US Congress to take a long walk off a short pier.

        • chvid 3 hours ago ago

          If history is a guide, the Dutch will do what the US asks of them.

          • toxicunderGroov 3 hours ago ago

            Sadly yes, wish we'd just told them to fuck off and make a deal with China, they are the future - but we seem to be very scared of daddy.

            • Gud an hour ago ago

              Why, so China can copy the technology and produce their one 5 years later?

              • toxicunderGroov 39 minutes ago ago

                Its not impossible but If it was that easy the Americans and Taiwanese would have already done that.

    • amelius 4 hours ago ago

      We'll soon be reading science textbooks in Chinese.

      • TFNA 4 hours ago ago

        It has recently been reporting that China is cutting back foreign-language programmes in universities because AI translation is seen as the way of the future. So, in their view everyone will soon be reading science textbooks, whether of Chinese provenance or not, in any language.

        • realusername 4 hours ago ago

          I think they are onto something, language learning is quickly shifting into a hobby category (I don't mean it negatively)

          • lambdaone 3 hours ago ago

            The problem with not learning languages is that it restricts you to computer-mediated communication. If you learn other languages than your own, even at a fairly basic level, there is a whole world of social interaction and culture out there that just can't be accessed with a machine in the way.

            This isn't to say that automated translation is bad, I use it extensively, but not all interaction worth having is online.

            • TFNA 2 hours ago ago

              The expectation is that AI translation will also become quasi-realtime, so for in-person interactions, too.

              Many cultures will probably much rather interact with a foreigner speaking proficient AI translation, than a language-learner speaking with a poor accent and constant grammatical imperfections. Go to the Netherlands now as a Dutch learner who hasn't reached B2 level, for example, and local people won't like it, it just wastes their time compared to using English.

    • ilovecake1984 4 hours ago ago

      Their cars and phones are still second rate. They are, however, cheap enough to be good value.

      • crote 4 hours ago ago

        > Their cars and phones are still second rate

        So are modern Western cars - and arguably also phones.

        If I'm forced to drive in a bug-riddled impossible-to-repair privacy-invading spaceship either way, why would I go for the overpriced outdated Western one rather than the affordable innovative Chinese one?

        I would prefer a boring 2000s car with an electric drivetrain, but it's not like anyone is making them...

        • rvnx 4 hours ago ago

          About privacy invasion, it works for all countries in the world.

          Vendor-lock is quite high, possibly higher in the US.

          Look at iPhone, hardware is behind, restricted, unauditable privacy and questionable software in terms of performance (especially starting iOS 26, where you lost the choice for Liquid Glass).

          Impossible to reasonably sync AirPods or watches, Macbook or choose the firmware version.

          In comparison, the irony is that China offers the freedom (like with Qwen).

          On these supposedly evil Chinese devices (phones, headphones, watches, etc), you have an open platform with great hardware, that you can modify as much as you want, and the only people who restrict you is... Google (making sure you cannot root without losing to important apps, so technically you can root, but practically you can't).

          All the claims about "China = bad hardware and bad software" were true 20 years ago, but this is not the case anymore.

          That being said, should certainly be quite cautious about default setup... you have US surveillance, PLUS, Chinese surveillance.

      • throwaw12 2 hours ago ago

        > Their cars and phones are still second rate

        What have you tried so far on a daily basis to say this?

        Have you tried latest Huawei models?

        By the way, Foxconn makes iPhones, does it count as Chinese quality or not?

      • epolanski 4 hours ago ago

        Have had two Xiaomi phones in a row, I don't see the second rate.

        My in law has a BYD Seagull, fail to see how it lags compared to similarly priced cars.

        Chinese cars are incredibly popular in Europe, because they are better cars at the same price tag, even the more expensive ones.

        I think it's asinine to think their high end manufacturing is crap, keeps us non competitive, let alone ignoring most of our stuff or large parts of it already comes from China.

        And it has nothing to do with wages, modern high end manufacturing is highly automated and skilled engineers are as expensive as in southern or central Europe.

    • ThrowawayTestr 4 hours ago ago

      Is cutting edge even necessary? If you could build the last two nodes 10x as cheaply that would be way more valuable.

      • eloisant 4 hours ago ago

        They're already capable to build microprocessors completely in-house. This is precisely the cutting edge we're talking about.

        This matters for AI datacenters in particular, if they want to be autonomous in building them they need to be able to build advanced microprocessors locally.

      • trvz 4 hours ago ago

        Cheaper isn’t even required; just better scalability.

      • SXX 4 hours ago ago

        If you have stolen IP designed for cutting edge processes you need about the same tech to produce said IP.

        Producing 10x of 10-years old GPUs is not exactly useful for modern AI codebases for instance.

        • jon-wood 4 hours ago ago

          Despite rumours to the contrary the world does need things that aren't useful for modern AI codebases still, I'd really appreciate it right now if China could get some fabs going that just manufactured RAM, storage, and maybe a selection of chips that the big ones have given up on because its more profitable to endlessly churn out GPUs and NPUs.

        • kasabali 4 hours ago ago

          I wouldn't mind getting 1080ti s , kaby lake cores or gigabytes of DDR4 for cheap.

        • holoduke 4 hours ago ago

          Constant blaming and framing others of stealing. State support, unfair practices etc is not gonna help you become successful. China is now part of the game. You better work with them.

    • joe_mamba 4 hours ago ago

      >The answer is, of course, yes.

      No, not in this case.

      > I remember when their cars were a joke, and when their cellphones were cheap trash.

      Any country can make cars and phones now if they REALLY want to, they just don't because they wouldn't be competitive on the global market at performance and at scale. But not anyone can just make an EUV machine if they want to.

      Becoming a leader in commodity white goods like a phones and cars is a different beast than EUV machines. The challenges are not even remotely comparable.

      China doesn't have a Zeiss, it doesn't have an ASM, it doesn't have a Cymer, it doesn't have a Trumpf, and it doesn't have a dozen other domestic competitors to western suppliers of critical parts that make an EUV machine.

      And each of those suppliers, like Zeiss for example, is a leader because it has decades of expertise that can't be speed-run, even with IP theft. So before China can have an ASML it first needs a Zeiss. So ask yourself where is their Zeiss and are they beating the west's Zeiss?

      • lambdaone 3 hours ago ago

        This is a Manhattan Project-level endeavour, and most countries would not be capable of it. China, however, is. Even though it lacks the expertise to do all these specific things to the Western cutting edge level right now, it has the resources, the overall technology and engineering base, and the determination to achieve the goal with the full power of the Chinese economy behind it. Not to mention industrial espionage.

        It might take them a decade, but they'll get there. Working on the basis that you can somehow stop China rather than merely delaying them is a comforting illusion.

      • tim333 40 minutes ago ago

        >China doesn't have a Zeiss

        It has the Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics (CIOMP)

        Founded 1952. One of its things:

        >4-Metre Silicon Carbide (SiC) Mirror: CIOMP successfully manufactured the world's largest single-piece Silicon Carbide mirror blank. It provides the optical backbone for high-resolution space telescope imaging systems

        Apparently carbide mirrors are used for EUV lithography.

        Nature article + pic of mirror https://www.nature.com/articles/s41377-022-01050-w

      • eloisant 4 hours ago ago

        They have more than 1 billion people that are getting more and more educated, they have the capital and will to invest in it, they will get there eventually.

        The "moat" we're talking about with private companies is that it's very hard for competitors to get enough funding to compete, and private investors are unwilling to invest in a company that will compete with a big established player. That's completely different when a state has a strategy and decides to invest to achieve a goal.

    • exceptione 4 hours ago ago

      The comparison with cars and cellphones falls short for ASML machines. The former categories involved western companies transferring IP to Chinese counterparts. So far, the Chinese have succeeded in stealing IP from ASML, but this is complexity in its own category. Also, the whole supply chain is part of the solution. That is a lot to copy.

      But I agree that, given enough time, China should be able to. But Volvo en Tesla handing over IP themselves, and phone makers letting China produce and assemble phones (maybe not as extensive these days anymore) is something different.

      EDIT: I mentioned Saab when I meant Volvo. Not sure if people downvoted based on that, I have no info on Saab so consider that as a mistake.

      • saidnooneever 4 hours ago ago

        people overstate complexity of ASmL machines. They are not impossible to make or use, specialist work sure but its possible. The only reason why no one does it is: 1) IP laws, 2) Costs

        China has Money and Smart people. (and very effective corporate / nationstate espionage) so they can most certainly reproduce advanced machines.

        They might not have incentive yet to do it because it will not make them popular, and potentially output products would be banned on US/EU. They play a long game and want US and EU consumers to ask tehir governments to please allow the chinese products.. so their market share is safe and stable.

        I think once there is enough incentive for them they would do it. They simply do not want to do it currently.

        • exceptione 3 hours ago ago

          Why do you think they don't want to do it? I find that a weird statement, and your given reasons don't make sense to me. This is one of their core programs, and as part of that have taken over some IP via espionage programs. China is actively trying to build one for quite some time now.

            > people overstate complexity of ASmL machines. They are not impossible to make or use, specialist work sure but its possible. The only reason why no one does it is: 1) IP laws, 2) Costs
          
          Citation needed, if these were the real roadblocks China would have had the machines by now already. Even with all the parts at hands (don't forget: from a total of 5100 suppliers) the Chinese couldn't assemble one. It is complex with a lot of know-how involved.

          The real reasons are: enormous complexity, lots of original research involved, deeply specialized supply chains. Recreating that takes lots of time and money. Even if you cut corners and steal IP. So that leaves China with 'time' as the real impediment. And who knows, AI will be a boost to get to that goal?

  • khurs 4 hours ago ago

    Any nation state can build pretty much anything (albeit over a varying time period), because at the State Level the budgets can be billions, no commercial pressure and also immunity from prosecution (e.g. a Chinese spy caught would be traded for something or another and returned home and state authorised hackers based in China won't get extradited).

    The only thing to stop them is the will of more powerful states.

    If you take Iran as an example, they would have possessed Nuclear weapons long ago if it wasn't for USA/Israel as Iran as a state will throw everything at it.

    p.s. And that's a very detailed and well laid out visual article above usual broadsheet standards.

    • fulafel 4 hours ago ago

      Kind of.. but at the same time:

      A nation state will fail at most things, because there's no budget, and there's commercial pressure, democratic pressure etc.

      One of the few things to make it work is lack of competition. Iran: they have a nuclear program because they can't buy what they want from the market.

  • throwaw12 2 hours ago ago

    I wholeheartedly wish China achieves it sooner.

    US sanctioning GPUs to China, then blocking access to latest SOTA models will impact everyone in the world negatively.

    We need competition, Europe is not an option anymore, hopefully Chinese labs will keep open sourcing SOTA models

    Based on the trend, if China wins, everyone benefits, if US wins, only Americans will benefit and everyone else will suffer

  • chvid 3 hours ago ago

    The latest from Huawei (which is probably the company to watch here) is an idea called "logic folding" which will squeeze more juice out of DUVL by 3D-stacking logic chips.

    So far they have announced road maps and benchmarks for their upcoming products using this. A new Kirin-series phone/laptop chip and an Ascend AI accelerator - stated performance comparable to leading US products made with EUVL.

    Products are due in August.

    • chvid 3 hours ago ago

      HUAWEI Presents the Tau (τ) Scaling Law, Enabling Breakthroughs in Transistor Density and System Performance

      https://www.huawei.com/en/news/2026/5/ieee-iscas-tau-scaling

      [Shanghai, China, May 25, 2026] Today, at the 2026 IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS), He Tingbo from HUAWEI delivered a keynote speech titled "New Semiconductor Path in Practice". In her speech, she presented the Tau (τ) Scaling Law, a new principle for guiding the future development of the semiconductor industry. This law proposes replacing geometric scaling with time (τ) scaling as a new guiding principle for the evolution of both semiconductors and electronic systems. Based on this principle, innovative technologies such as LogicFolding can be used to continuously compress signal propagation delay and steadily improve transistor density, which will drive the ongoing evolution of semiconductors and electronic systems.

  • jruz 4 hours ago ago

    I love to see China evolving so fast, the only producers bringing prices down.

  • monssooon 4 hours ago ago

    They can land stuff on the moon... Generally they have world class engineers and production... Just from that point or view I don't see why not...

    • usrnm 4 hours ago ago

      Humanity has been able to land stuff on the Moon for 60 years. It's not easy, but not particularly cutting edge as well. A modern EUV machine is much more complicated

  • babuskov 4 hours ago ago

    The question is "can anyone". Makes you wonder why the USA hasn't built one? Maybe the latest technology required some rare discovery. Just like nobody can replicate the taste of Coca Cola, maybe there some tiny detail that they discovered by experimenting.

    • rvnx 4 hours ago ago

      It doesn't help that Coca-Cola has privileged access to decocainized flavor extract, from there, others are guaranteed to struggle to get access to one ingredient.

      The main flabbergasting stuff about Coca-Cola is the fact that they choose to use HFCS in some countries, and sugar in others, and this is due to... protectionism again that artificially skews competition like for electronics.

    • joe_mamba 4 hours ago ago

      >Makes you wonder why the USA hasn't built one?

      They basically (almost) did. In 2013 ASML bought US Cymer(the maker of EUV light sources) and in 2001 ASML acquired the US-based lithography equipment manufacturer Silicon Valley Group (SVG) after it had encountered liquidity issues.

      Basically, the US had everything needed, the EUV light sources and lithography machines, just spread over different companies facing financial issues, so ASML came at the right moment and bought them all and integrated into their own business.

      Just because ASML is based in NL doesn't mean all of its EUV secret sauce IP is domestically Dutch. Most of it comes from the US, which is why the US government maintains such a high influence of ASML's trade restrictions.

      • guiraldelli 3 hours ago ago

        "Most of [IP of ASML] comes from US" is an extremely generous sentence.

        It is true those companies you referred to were bought and their IP has helped ASML in _EUV_, but they had 20 years of European IP before that, all related other parts of the lithography machine (and not EUV) that made ASML the company it is.

        If you think that complexity is only in (light) source for EUV (is it already profitable for ASML, by the way?), then you have no idea the complexity of that machine!

        Disclaimer: I worked in their metrology department.

        • joe_mamba 3 hours ago ago

          > but they had 20 years of European IP before that, all related other parts of the lithography machine (and not EUV) that made ASML the company it is.

          Was any of that 20 year old European DUV lithography machine IP superior to the IP from the other DUV champions, Canon and Nikon?

        • undefined 3 hours ago ago
          [deleted]
  • didip 4 hours ago ago

    I don’t see why not. China can move a mountain with a billion spoons if they want to.

    China’s willpower and centralized deployment of that willpower is legendary.

  • metalman 4 hours ago ago

    China IS building it's own chip foundrys and lithographic machines that ARE producing chips that ARE closing the gap towards parity with the best western (ASML) companys. The question is can they do that, this year, or next?

    • exceptione 4 hours ago ago

      I thought the time frame of 10 years is the most recent forecast.

  • NordStreamYacht 4 hours ago ago

    Inevitable. Huawei already had 7nm a couple of years ago.

    • dangero 3 hours ago ago

      They used ASML machines to make that…

  • HSO 4 hours ago ago

    obviously

    the qn is if it will be what china wants and needs

    more likely something better or more suited to the ecosystem in china will emerge

  • peter-m80 2 hours ago ago

    the real question is "when?"

  • isoprophlex 4 hours ago ago

    Why couldn't they? Why wouldn't they? Why should anyone resist them?

    The US is ran by a moronic kleptocracy of conmen and number-go-up techbros that give precisely zero shits about human rights and improving life for the average citizen.

    There is no way to defend the moral or political superiority of the west anymore. And who needs to worry about foreign intervention destabilizing internal affairs when we let the extremists, the populists do that for us?

    At least if China pulls this off we might get some semi-affordable RAM and SSDs.

  • rich_sasha 3 hours ago ago

    As many comments say, of course they can. They are an illiberal country, very good at semi-centrallised command, semi market economy. They have shown a number of areas where through determination and massive central effort they bridged enormous gaps. Chinese cars are already much better than a lot of established tech, not to mention solar, batteries etc.

    I do however wonder how long China can afford to pay the price for this. China is effectively heavily subsidising it's export and research efforts to catch up. But subsidizing with what? They don't have a magic money tree.

    To flesh it out a bit more: people in the West complain that the Chinese are unfairly competing, by selling their stuff - cars, batteries, chips etc - at an unfairly low price, either via subsidies or an artificially low exchange rate (or both). There's also IP theft, sure, but there's plenty of home grown IP too.

    So this means that when German workers build a car, they get paid a lot more than the Chinese workers. The Chinese AI researchers get paid less than the Americans - for the same work. Sure, it's a mix of patriotic fervor, different purchasing power of the salary (agricultural goods are cheaper in China because farmers get paid less for the same work), etc etc. Subsidies are the same thing scaled up - Chinese government collects taxes, i.e. makes Chinese people work more for the same ultimate outcome.

    But this extra economic heft is not coming from nowhere. China is channeling funds that it could spend elsewhere, but instead spends on high IP industries.

    Europe and US could do the same. But at a cost! They could tax people more, who would have less money to spend (making them unhappy and affecting GDP growth), or cut investment elsewhere. You could finance it with debt, and we all know how well this tends to go.

    I don't know enough about the Chinese economy to even try to have an opinion as to where this money is coming from, and what they aren't spending it on but should. But the unwind is coming sooner or later. You can't subsidise something forever. You can't grow your GDP with subsidies. So what's going to give?

    It might be that they are hoping to kill foreign industry, become a monopoly and milk it, like the US under Trump is trying to in smaller scale. But of they were a free economy, it would be a race - can they stay solvent for long enough? Liberal or not, they are still an economy, and you can't beat gravity forever. I'm curious how it plays out.

    • orwin 23 minutes ago ago

      > But subsidizing with what? They don't have a magic money tree.

      They do though. The advantage of state capitalism is that at anytime you can switch from a fully capitalist economy, where the market is everywhere save the family cell, to a statist economy where the state decides what goes where, to anything in between. If the CCP says 'retirement won't be paid in RMB but in foodstuffs for everyone, and the funds are reappropriated', they kill their debt.

      • rich_sasha 11 minutes ago ago

        Right - but means of production can't be created and destroyed from nothing. Proper centrally planned economies all thought it could and failed.

        China is much more free at moving them from one place to another, in particular allocating them differently to the hedonistic preferences of their citizens.

        But it's still only moving not creating. For now it seems, the thing that needs to give is the workers' consumption. What else? No idea.

  • _davide_ 4 hours ago ago

    What a well written article!

  • utopiah 4 hours ago ago

    ASML literally makes the most complex machines on Earth. Sure rockets are powerful and they help us reach outer space ... yet they need computers to do so. Computers in turn are made with lithography machines and the SOTA is ASML.

    Also ASML is not alone. In fact ASML can not exists without its partners, first and foremost American Department of Energy but also s IMEC in Belgium and Zeiss in Germany. Those are all SOTA in either R&D or production. They are not "some of the best" they are literally the best in their very complex expertise. In fact they have to collaborate reach such level.

    ... and yet, it's "just" that. There is nothing magical about ASML. Yes it might be practically impossible because of IP, economics, etc but still China (or anyone else) can definitely pour a lot of resources to try and make significant process. Will the result be competitive though in light of the moat ASML has, in particular partnerships, that is hard to imagine.

    PS edit : I did like Chris Miller's "Chip War: The Fight for the World's Most Critical Technology" and FWIW did have a former colleague working at ASML and been invited to IMEC events.

  • rvnx 4 hours ago ago

    Yes and that will be great. More competition = more choice = less political risk = great.

    Protectionism policies are blocking low prices (what about tariffs ? what about monopolies ?) and are benefiting only the ones holding the knowledge and factories at the detriment of the rest of humanity.

    Can't wait for ASML / TSMC / Zeiss equivalents so we can have access to memory sticks and GPUs / AI accelerators to run Qwen Super-Large distilled on Claude Zulu model, GTA VIII or whatever will come at that time.

  • IshKebab 4 hours ago ago

    Crazy that the US had to block ASML selling to China. I would have thought they'd do that themselves to reduce the risk of reverse engineering.

    • gregoriol 4 hours ago ago

      Trying to prevent someone from having something they want is the best way to make them work twice harder to get it.

    • Quothling 4 hours ago ago

      I think what is crazy here is that the USA can block a Dutch company from selling their products. Don't get me wrong, this would have made sense in the world 15 years ago, but today? We all know that China plays dirty, but all those US made LLM's sure seem to know an awful lot about things in IP protected content.

      Though to be fair, I think everyone knew that China was always going to have their 100% domestic chip manufacturing supply chain. I'd argue that the blocks were mainly a delaying tactic by the USA oligarchy. Simply blocking ASML from doing business with China would in itself motivate China to move faster, but I guess the decision makers and their advisors calculated that it would be slower than letting China buy the machinery and reverse engineer it.

      Of course that didn't really work out. The only reason the media is picking up on these stories is that China, did, get their hands on the machinery, but then... of course they did.

      • throw1234567891 4 hours ago ago

        > I think what is crazy here is that the USA can block a Dutch company from selling their products.

        Because the light source comes from the US.

    • tancop 4 hours ago ago

      asml will be profitable even after china catches up with their current tech. its not a silicon valley type company that wants a monopoly. if anything most of their engineers secretly want china to compete so they can push each other to do more advanced research.

      • rvnx 3 hours ago ago

        One scenario: it will be profitable because European and US governments are going to forbid companies like NVIDIA to use Chinese machines.

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