Core Insights - The Chinese Ministry of Commerce has implemented export controls on foreign items and related technologies containing Chinese mineral components, effective from October 9, 2025, under the principle of "long-arm jurisdiction" [1][3]. Policy and Regulations - The export control applies to products containing 0.1% or more of Chinese heavy mineral components or utilizing Chinese mineral technology, requiring approval from Chinese authorities [3]. - Export applications for military users or those related to the development of weapons of mass destruction will be directly rejected [3]. Impact on Semiconductor Industry - China holds a dominant position in the mineral sector, with 37% of global mineral reserves and over 70% of the refining and separation processes, particularly controlling 87% of the global smelting capacity for high-purity heavy minerals used in lithography machines [5]. - ASML is facing an unprecedented supply chain crisis due to the new regulations, with internal assessments indicating a potential 30% decrease in EUV lithography machine capacity if mineral supply disruptions continue [5][7]. - The delivery cycle for each EUV lithography machine is expected to extend from 24 months to 36 months, impacting major semiconductor manufacturers like TSMC, Samsung, and Intel, which are in critical phases of building next-generation chip factories [7]. Defense Industry Consequences - The U.S. defense industry is also affected, with Lockheed Martin's F-35 radar sensitivity declining by 23% due to a lack of neodymium magnets, and Boeing's MQ-25 drone project facing risks due to shortages of mineral permanent magnet motors [9]. - A significant 78% of guided systems in existing U.S. weapon stockpiles are reported to be facing mineral supply crises [9]. Global Supply Chain Repercussions - The export controls have led to a 60% reduction in global EUV lithography mirror coating capacity, with China being the sole producer of high-purity gadolinium gallium garnet crystals necessary for precise temperature control in lithography machines [11]. - Companies attempting to bypass Chinese minerals face challenges, with alternative materials resulting in a 40% cost increase and a 30% performance decline [9]. Strategic Responses - The Chinese semiconductor industry is exploring unique strategies to overcome external technology blockades, such as the "non-lithography compensation" strategy proposed by New Kai Lai, which aims to optimize DUV lithography processes to achieve EUV-like precision [11][13]. - Domestic development of EUV photoresists and auxiliary materials has seen significant progress, with over 30% of key photoresists achieving domestic production rates [13]. Industry Restructuring - The global semiconductor supply chain is undergoing deep restructuring due to China's mineral controls, with the EU aiming for an 80% self-sufficiency rate in minerals by 2030 and the U.S. Department of Defense investing $90 billion to build a domestic mineral supply chain [15]. - The shift from "efficiency-first" to "security-first" in supply chains poses challenges to ASML's global production model [15]. Technological Challenges - Attempts by Japanese companies to replace critical minerals have shown significant performance degradation, with experiments indicating a 47% performance drop in gallium-based magnets after 3000 hours of operation [17]. - China's dual-review mechanism for export controls requires comprehensive data tracing from mines to finished products for any foreign products using Chinese minerals, increasing supply chain transparency challenges for ASML [17].
中国一纸矿物质审批,为何能让ASML光刻机产线告急?全球芯片命门浮现