- US chip export controls now claim global authority over Huawei’s Ascend processors worldwide
- The policy forces a global tech divide, potentially harming innovation and international collaboration
When Huawei released the Mate 60 Pro smartphone, it surprised the global tech industry. Despite sweeping US technology restrictions, it featuring an advanced 7-nanometer chip. Innovation, it appeared, finds a way – even under the heaviest sanctions. The US response was swift and predictable: tighter export controls and stronger rules.
Since, America has preemptively escalated its semiconductor war to global proportions after reports suggesting Huawei’s Ascend AI chips are approaching Nvidia-level performance – although the Chinese company remains characteristically silent about developments.
The Trump administration’s declaration that using Huawei’s Ascend chips “anywhere in the world” violates US export controls reveals more than policy enforcement – it exposes a fundamental fear that American technological dominance may no longer be guaranteed through restrictions alone.
The global AI chip ban emerged on May 14, 2025, when President Donald Trump’s administration rescinded the Biden-era AI Diffusion Rule without revealing details of a replacement policy.
Instead, the Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) announced guidance to “strengthen export controls for overseas AI chips,” specifically targeting Huawei’s Ascend processors.
The new guidelines warn of “enforcement actions” including imprisonment and fines for any global business found using the Chinese-developed chips – a fundamental departure from traditional export controls, which typically govern what leaves a country’s borders, not what happens entirely outside them.
The scope of America’s tech authority
The South China Morning Post reports that the new guidelines single out Huawei’s Ascend chips explicitly after the scrapping of the Biden administration’s country-tiered “AI diffusion” rule. But the implications of this latest global AI chip ban extend far beyond bilateral US-China tensions.
By asserting jurisdiction over global technology choices, America is essentially demanding that sovereign nations and independent businesses worldwide comply with its domestic policy preferences.
Thus, a Brazilian AI startup is apparently prevented from using the most cost-effective chip solution because its chosen chips are manufactured by a Chinese company. Therefore, should European research institutions abandon promising collaborations because they involve hardware Washington deems unacceptable?
According to Financial Times reporting, BIS stated that Huawei’s Ascend 910B, 910C, and 910D were all subject to the regulations as they were likely “designed with certain US software or technology or produced with semiconductor manufacturing equipment that is the direct product of certain US-origin software or technology, or both.”
Industry resistance to universal controls
Even in the United States, the chipmaking sector expresses alarm about Washington’s semiconductor policies. The aggressive expansion of export controls creates uncertainty beyond Chinese companies, affecting global supply chains and innovation partnerships built over decades. The forced binary choice ignores the nuanced reality of modern technology development, where innovation emerges from diverse, international collaborations.
As noted in SCMP’s report, “Washington’s new guidelines are essentially forcing global tech firms to pick a side – Chinese or US hardware – which will further deepen the tech divide between the world’s two largest economies.”
The economic implications could prove staggering. Recent analysis indicates Huawei’s Ascend 910B AI chip delivers 80% of Nvidia A100’s efficiency when training large language models, though “in some other tests, Ascend chips can beat the A100 by 20%,” the FT states.
By blocking access to competitive alternatives, the global AI chip ban may inadvertently stifle innovation and maintain artificial market monopolies.
The innovation paradox
Ironically, policies intended to maintain American technological leadership may undermine it. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang acknowledged earlier this month that Huawei was “one of the most formidable technology companies in the world,” noting that China was “not behind” in AI development.
Attempting to isolate such capabilities through global restrictions may accelerate the development of parallel technology ecosystems, ultimately reducing American influence rather than preserving it.
The secrecy surrounding Huawei’s Ascend chips – with the company keeping “details of its AI chips close to its chest, with only public information coming from third-party teardown reports” – has intensified with US sanctions.
Following escalating restrictions, Huawei stopped officially disclosing information about the series, including release dates, production schedules, and fabrication technologies. The chips specified in current US restrictions, including the Ascend 910C and 910D, haven’t even been officially confirmed as existing by Huawei.
Geopolitical ramifications
In a South China Morning Post report, Chim Lee, a senior analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit, warns that “if the guidance is enforced strictly, it is likely to provoke retaliation from China” and could become “a negotiating point in ongoing trade talks between Washington and Beijing.” Their assessment underscores the counterproductive nature of aggressive unilateral action in an interconnected global economy.
The semiconductor industry thrives on international collaboration, shared research, and open competition. Policies that fragment this ecosystem serve no one’s long-term interests – including America’s.
As the global community grapples with challenges from climate change to healthcare innovation, artificial barriers preventing the best minds from accessing optimal tools ultimately harm human progress.
Beyond binary choices
The question isn’t whether nations should protect strategic interests – they should and must. But when export controls extend “anywhere in the world,” we cross from legitimate national security policy into technological authoritarianism. The global technology community deserves frameworks that balance security concerns with innovation imperatives.
The global AI chip ban risks accelerating the technological fragmentation it seeks to prevent. History suggests markets divided by political decree often spawn parallel innovation ecosystems that compete more effectively than those operating under artificial constraints.
Rather than extending controls globally, a strategic approach would focus on out-innovating competitors through superior technology and international partnerships. The current path toward technological bifurcation serves neither American interests nor global innovation – it simply creates a more fragmented, less efficient world where artificial barriers replace natural competition.
The semiconductor industry’s future depends on finding sustainable solutions that address legitimate security concerns without dismantling the collaborative networks that drive technological advancement. As this global AI chip ban takes effect, the world watches to see whether innovation will flourish through competition or fragment through control.
See also: Huawei’s AI hardware breakthrough challenges Nvidia’s dominance
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