
US Lifts Chip Design Software Curbs on China in Trade Deal
The US Commerce Department informed the world's three leading semiconductor design software providers — Synopsys Inc., Cadence Design Systems Inc. and Germany's Siemens AG — that requirements to seek government licenses for business in China are no longer in place, according to company statements.
Siemens has restored full access to its software and technology for Chinese customers, the company said, while Synopsys and Cadence said they're in the process of resuming such services in the Asian country. The Commerce Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment about its notices that lifted the curbs, which were also imposed on smaller makers of electronic design automation, or EDA, tools.
White House officials cracked down on EDA sales to China in May as part of a raft of measures responding to Beijing's limits on shipments of essential rare earths. Under a trade agreement finalized last week, Washington promised to allow shipments of EDA software, as well as ethane and jet engines, to China — provided Beijing first honor its pledge to speed export approvals for critical minerals used in everything from wind turbines to airplanes.
The move to lift EDA curbs is a sign that the accord reached in London — which would bring the countries back to the terms of a deal struck the previous month in Geneva — is indeed being implemented. In addition to chip software sales, the US last week allowed makers of a critical petroleum product to transport gas tankers to Chinese ports, and then fully removed those license requirements this week, ethane companies said Wednesday.
Beijing also achieved a higher-level longtime goal: Washington has now put export controls, a national security tool historically treated as non-negotiable, on the table in trade talks.
When the EDA controls were first imposed, industry officials saw little reason to question whether they'd stick. The US for years used export controls to limit China's access to advanced chips and the equipment needed to make them, in an effort to prevent Beijing from developing advanced AI that could benefit its military. Expanding that campaign to encompass EDA software — used to design everything from high-end Nvidia Corp. and Apple Inc. processors to simple parts like power-regulation components — was a longtime priority for some China hawks in Washington. And the Trump administration had just shown it would intensify China chip curbs by tightening restrictions on Nvidia's sales.
But the EDA measures were unusual because US officials offered little detail on what was and wasn't allowed — parameters that typically are discussed at length during a formal regulatory process. Then, barely two weeks after their imposition, National Economic Council head Kevin Hassett, speaking at the start of London trade talks, said the US may ease semiconductor controls he described as 'very important' to China. While Hassett and other senior Trump officials said curbs on Nvidia chips weren't up for discussion, the industry lacked clarity throughout the London meetings — and for weeks thereafter — about when, and whether, the EDA curbs would be lifted.
Ultimately, some Washington officials were relieved to see the US offer what they saw as lower-priority semiconductor concessions to Beijing, Bloomberg has reported — safeguarding, at least for now, the Nvidia chip export limits they view as vital. But some also see controls on EDA as a crucial step in their own right, one that that shouldn't be negotiated away as part of any trade deal.
'EDA software sales had been one of the few remaining inputs to Huawei's chip development left untouched,' said Ryan Fedasiuk, a former State Department China adviser, in reference to the telecom giant at the center of Beijing's semiconductor ambitions. 'Restricting EDA licenses would have dealt a decisive blow to the company's next-gen chip design timelines, and hobbled its competitiveness in global markets.'
EDA companies, meanwhile, are contending with a new worry, Bloomberg has reported: Even with access to the Chinese market restored, customers there may hunt for other suppliers or further develop domestic capabilities in response to heightened geopolitical risks.
With assistance from Ian King, Jenny Leonard and Michael Shepard.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Mint
19 minutes ago
- Mint
India well-placed to benefit from tariff-led trade shifts, says Moody's
New Delhi: India is well-positioned to benefit from a global realignment in trade and investment flows driven by shifting tariff regimes, and could outpace several Asia-Pacific (APAC) peers, Moody's Ratings said on Thursday. As multinationals reassess supply chains amid rising protectionism and evolving trade policies, India's relative tariff advantage may strengthen its appeal as an emerging global manufacturing hub, Moody's noted in its latest Sovereigns – Asia-Pacific Outlook. 'India may be subject to lower tariffs than many in APAC, which could help the economy attract further investment flows and support its development as a global manufacturing base. The signing of a free trade agreement with the UK in May and ongoing efforts to establish the same with the EU will further support such development,' the report said. Moody's pointed out that compared to countries like Cambodia and Vietnam, India is better placed to gain meaningfully from trade diversion and shifting capital flows—thanks to its scale, policy orientation, and improved market access through bilateral agreements. The recently concluded free trade agreement with the UK was highlighted as a key enabler of India's broader trade ambitions. Parallel efforts to negotiate a pact with the European Union are also expected to boost market access and strengthen investor confidence. However, Moody's cautioned that broader trends in global industrial policy could still temper the scale of these gains. 'The US' goal to reshore select manufacturing segments could challenge the extent to which India benefits,' the report said. The commentary comes at a time when India is accelerating its push to emerge as an alternative manufacturing base to China, supported by targeted policy incentives, supply chain development, and efforts to deepen trade integration with developed economies. To be sure, US President Donald Trump's 'reciprocal tariffs' policy—announced in April—aims to impose higher duties on countries that levy steeper tariffs on American goods, triggering a wave of global trade renegotiations. Under the plan, a broad 10% baseline tariff was introduced in April, with steeper rates imposed on countries such as China and Vietnam. A temporary 90-day pause was granted to allow for negotiations. Since then, the U.S. has revised trade deals with the UK, China, and most recently Vietnam, trimming their tariff exposure as it races to finalize more agreements before the July 9 deadline. Meanwhile, Washington and New Delhi are negotiating a trade agreement aimed at avoiding the steep duties lined up under Trump's plan.


NDTV
20 minutes ago
- NDTV
Jailed Russian Dissidents Call For Mass Prisoner Release As Part Of Ukraine Peace Deal
London: Eleven jailed Russian dissidents have written to world leaders appealing for a mass release of Russian political prisoners and Ukrainian civilians held by Russia - some 10,000 people in total, they say - as part of any peace deal between Moscow and Kyiv. In the letter, published via Reuters, the dissidents said that alongside prisoners of war, thousands of Ukrainian civilian "hostages" were being held by Russia, mostly in Russian-held areas of Ukraine. Talks in May and June on ending Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine made no progress towards a ceasefire, despite a pledge by U.S. President Donald Trump to end the war, but the two sides have exchanged captured soldiers and war dead. "We call on both sides of the negotiations between Russia and Ukraine to immediately conduct an exchange of prisoners of war and civilians according to the formula 'all for all', including Ukrainian civilian hostages," the letter said. Among the signatories was Alexei Gorinov, 63, who in 2022 became the first person to go to prison under laws passed shortly after the Ukraine invasion that made it a crime to spread "false information" about the armed forces. The youngest to sign was Darya Kozyreva, 19, who was sentenced in April to two years and eight months in prison for using graffiti and 19th-century poetry to protest against the war in Ukraine. They placed themselves alongside thousands of Ukrainians who, according to human rights groups, have been detained by Russia, mostly in Russian-controlled regions of Ukraine. "There are at least 10,000 of us - Russian political prisoners and Ukrainian civilian hostages. We are all punished for one thing - for taking a civic stance," they wrote. Moscow has not commented on the alleged figure. The dissidents called for "the immediate and unconditional release of sick political prisoners who are dying in Russian prisons" in their statement, which was backed by a message from Russian Nobel Peace Prize winner Dmitry Muratov. Muratov's message and the letter urged leaders in Russia, Ukraine, the European Union, the United States and elsewhere to act. RUSSIA'S PEACE TERMS At the peace talks in Istanbul last month, Russia handed Ukraine a memorandum proposing "a mutual amnesty of 'political prisoners' and release of detained civilians" as a possible condition for a ceasefire in the three-and-a-half-year conflict. Asked about the status of the proposal and how many people it would cover, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Thursday: "We don't publicly discuss the... content of the memorandum, which we haven't even discussed with the Ukrainian side yet. We believe that discussion through the media can only harm the process." The proposal was part of a wider package of Russian demands that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy described as an ultimatum. They include a halt to all Ukrainian troop movements except for withdrawals, and end to call-ups, foreign weapons supplies and martial law as well as the holding of new presidential and parliamentary elections. No date has yet been set for further talks. Describing their experience, the dissidents wrote: "The concepts of justice and fairness are absent in Russia today; anyone who dares to think critically can end up behind bars." Defendants in political cases had no chance of a fair hearing and were never acquitted, they said. Once in prison, their lives were in danger and they were at risk of denunciations from other inmates - something that led, in Gorinov's case, to an additional three-year sentence. The other signatories were sociologist Boris Kagarlitsky, self-described anarchist Azat Miftakhov, poet Artem Kamardin and activists Anna Arkhipova, Vladimir Domnin, Dmitry Pchelintsev, Andrei Trofimov, Ilya Shakursky and Alexander Shestun. The Kremlin says cases are a matter for the courts and the prison service and Russia needs to apply its laws firmly to deter what it sees as subversive, Western-backed activity. Elena Filina, an exiled opposition politician who helped gather the signatures from inmates scattered across Russia's vast penal system, told Reuters the prisoners felt the peace talks may provide their last chance to be free. "If peace agreements are signed without taking into account their amnesty, exchange or any other way of release, the window of opportunity will slam shut for a long time."


NDTV
22 minutes ago
- NDTV
Hamas Seeks Ceasefire Guarantees As Scores More Killed In Gaza
Cairo: Hamas is seeking guarantees that a new US ceasefire proposal for Gaza would lead to the war's end, a source close to the group said on Thursday, as medics said Israeli strikes across the territory had killed scores more people. Israeli officials said prospects for reaching a ceasefire deal and hostage deal appeared high, nearly 21 months since the war between Israel and Hamas began. On the ground, intensified Israeli strikes across Gaza continued unabated, killing at least 59 people on Thursday, according to health authorities in the territory. Efforts for a Gaza truce have gathered steam after the US secured a ceasefire to end a 12-day aerial conflict between Israel and Iran. On Tuesday, US President Donald Trump said that Israel had accepted the conditions needed to finalise a 60-day ceasefire with Hamas, during which the parties will work to end the war. Hamas is seeking clear guarantees that the ceasefire will eventually lead to the war's end, the source close to the group said. Two Israeli officials said that those details were still being worked out. Ending the war has been the main sticking point in repeated rounds of failed negotiations. A separate source familiar with the matter said that Israel was expecting Hamas' response by Friday and that if it was positive, an Israeli delegation would join indirect talks to cement the deal. It was unclear whether those would be held in Egypt or Qatar, the two countries that have been mediating talks. The proposal includes the staggered release of 10 living Israeli hostages and the return of the bodies of 18 more in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails, sources say. Of the 50 remaining hostages in Gaza, 20 are believed to still be alive. A senior Israeli official close to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said preparations were in place to approve a ceasefire deal even as the premier heads to Washington to meet Trump on Monday. 'Readiness to advance' Israeli Energy Minister Eli Cohen, who sits on Netanyahu's security cabinet, told news website Ynet that there was "definitely readiness to advance a deal." In Gaza, however, there was little sign of relief. At least 17 people were killed in an Israeli strike that hit a school in Gaza City where displaced families were sheltering, according to medics. "Suddenly, we found the tent collapsing over us and a fire burning. We don't know what happened," one witness, Wafaa Al-Arqan, told Reuters. "What can we do? Is it fair that all these children burned?" According to medics at Nasser hospital farther south, at least 20 people were killed by Israeli fire en route to an aid distribution site. The Israeli military said it was looking into the reports and that its forces were taking precautions to mitigate harm to civilians as it battled Palestinian militants throughout Gaza. The war began when Hamas fighters charged into Israel on October 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages back to Gaza, according to Israeli tallies. Israel's subsequent military assault has killed more than 57,000 Palestinians, according to the Gaza health ministry, while displacing most of the population of more than 2 million, triggering widespread hunger and leaving much of the territory in ruins. Israel says it won't end the war while Hamas is still armed and ruling Gaza. Hamas, severely weakened, says it won't lay down its weapons but is willing to release all the hostages still in Gaza if Israel ends the war.