Taiwan adds Huawei and SMIC
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Taiwan has officially placed two of China’s most prominent technology firms, Huawei and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) on its strategic export control list.
Huawei Technologies is expected to produce no more than 200,000 Ascend-series AI chips in 2025, according to the US Department of Commerce, highlighting China's advancing chip design capabilities while also exposing its enduring manufacturing constraints.
Huawei Digital Power and Peak Energy, a leading Singapore-based Independent Power Producer (IPP), officially signed a Memorandum of Understanding at SNEC 2025, forming a powerful alliance to fast-track the rollout of renewable energy solutions across the Asia-Pacific C&I sector.
HWT.UL] is capable of producing no more than 200,000 advanced artificial intelligence chips in 2025, a top U.S. exports controls official told lawmakers on Thursday, warning that though the number is below the company's demand,
Huawei Technologies Co. founder Ren Zhengfei dismissed the impact of US export restrictions on China in a front-page People’s Daily article, wading into one of the key topics dogging Washington-Beijing trade negotiations.
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Huawei has just announced the Chinese launch of its Pura 80 flagship phones, and the Ultra comes with a clever trick: a “switchable” dual-lens telephoto camera that allows two different lenses to share the same sensor.
The moves in AI and cloud infrastructure may deepen US concerns about China’s growing digital presence in Latin America.
Huawei Digital Power, in collaboration with SchneiTec, has successfully commissioned Cambodia's first-ever TÜV SÜD-certified grid-forming energy storage project, marking a key milestone in the country's transition toward a sustainable energy future.