China’s Weakness: Japan’s Semiconductor Technology is Its Strongest Weapon

 China’s Weakness: Japan’s Semiconductor Technology is Its Strongest Weapon
1. Without Japanese manufacturing equipment, China cannot produce semiconductors!
2. Japanese materials are essential for improving China’s semiconductor yield!
We bring you the latest news from an article published on Yahoo! News.
By TokioX’press
Semiconductor, EUV RisoGraphy

[Part 1]: Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment Regulation: Japan vs. China:

What cards does Japan have in the fight against China’s aggressive attacks on Japan?

Japan’s strongest card against China is “semiconductor manufacturing equipment.”

1. U.S. Congressional Report: <Semiconductors and the CHIPS Act>: Congress.gov:

As of September 28, 2023, “Japan’s share of semiconductor manufacturing equipment is 35%,” giving it a near monopoly on certain manufacturing equipment.

 

2. US CSIS Report: <Japan Aims to Revitalize the Semiconductor Industry>

On August 25, 2023, the report predicted that “Japan will have a near-monopoly in the fields of semiconductor manufacturing equipment and semiconductor materials.”

Tokyo Electron (TEL):

– TEL has developed a dedicated EUV inline coater/developer, a “specialized device that simultaneously coats and prints.”

– TEL’s inline coater/developer holds a 100% share of the global EUV market.

1. EUV Lithography:

EUV lithography uses EUV light with a wavelength of 13.5nm. It is a cutting-edge exposure technology for creating semiconductor circuit patterns.

– Japan produces many of the EUV lithography equipment used in advanced-node chip manufacturing.

– This technology enables the creation of circuit patterns at 7nm and below, making it essential for the production of high-performance smartphones.

2. Chip Stacking:

Tokyo Electron aims to achieve “chip stacking on 300mm wafers.”

– This technology increases the density of semiconductor chips by stacking multiple chips.

– It enables the reduction of board mounting area, resulting in the miniaturization, high performance, and power savings of electronic devices.

Tokyo Electron’s Global Strategy:

Nanoscale Science and Engineering College (CNSE: Albany, NY)

– TEL has dispatched hundreds of employees to Japan and is conducting joint research and development with IBM.

– TEL invested $167 million in the construction of a new production facility in Japan in March 2023.

Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment Companies: Global Market Share Ranking (Quoted from CSIS):

1. Photomasks:
Japan’s JEOL and NuFlare Technology: 91% share of the global market for EUV lithography mask manufacturing.

2. Resist Processing:
Japan’s Tokyo Electron and SCREEN: 96% of the global market for resist processing equipment.

3. Wafer Crystal Processing:
Japan’s ACRETEC, Okimoto, Toyo, and Disco: 95% of the global market for wafer crystal processing equipment.

4. Wafer Handling Equipment:
Japan’s ROHSE, Daifuku, and Muratec: 88% of the global market for wafer handling equipment.

China’s Semiconductor Manufacturing: Manufacturing Equipment Import Share: Indian Media (Techovedas): October 14, 2025

What percentage of China’s semiconductor manufacturing equipment imports comes from Japan?

Is China’s declining imports of Japanese semiconductors a sign of Chinese independence?

1. In the first half of 2025, imports from Japan were $6.4 billion, while domestic Chinese production was $6.93 billion (49.99 billion RMB).

2. In the first half of 2025, domestic Chinese production already surpassed imports from Japan.

インドの半導体科学技術メディアTechovedasのデータを基にグラフは筆者作成

Figure 1: Trends in China’s Imports of Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment from Japan and Domestic Production

“Made in China 2025”: China’s High-Tech National Strategy:

If Japan were to play a checkmate against China, the sooner it did so, the greater the impact.

1. As Figure 1 shows, China is reducing imports from Japan and accelerating domestic growth.

2. Given China’s high dependence on Japan, Japan should quickly impose export restrictions on semiconductor manufacturing equipment.

[Part 2]: Japan’s Restrictions on Semiconductor Materials:

1. High-End Photoresists:

– Four companies: Shin-Etsu Chemical, Tokyo Ohka Kogyo, JSR, and Fujifilm Electronic Materials.
– Japanese companies account for 75% of global production of high-end photoresists for advanced chip manufacturing.

Japan has a de facto monopoly. Sumitomo Chemical has also newly entered the photoresist production market.

2. Japan’s Semiconductor Materials: 14 Key Materials:

– Japan has been the world’s largest semiconductor materials manufacturer for decades.
– Japan holds over 50% of the global market share for each of the 14 key materials essential to chip manufacturing.

3. Japan’s 3D Chip Packaging: 3D Stacking of Multiple Semiconductors:

– Japanese semiconductor material suppliers, including Nissan Chemical and Showa Denko.

– Nissan Chemical developed a new 3D packaging technology (a temporary adhesive) in 2024.

4. Japan’s Silicon Wafers: World’s Top Manufacturing Share:

– Two Japanese materials manufacturers, SUMCO and Shin-Etsu Chemical.

– They account for 60% of the global market share for silicon wafers, essential for chip manufacturing.

OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development): Wafer Market Ranking:

– Over 50% of the global silicon wafer market is supplied by two Japanese companies, Shin-Etsu Chemical and SUMCO.

Examples include Global Wafers (of Chinese Taipei) and Germany’s Siltronic.

China’s Import Dependence: China’s Wafer Self-Sufficiency Rate:

In other words, China’s wafer self-sufficiency rate is nearly 50%, while its import dependency is also 50%.

However, it should be noted that China has begun domestic production of photoresist, although it is still at the KrF photoresist stage.

[Part 3]: Japan’s Restrictions on High-Precision Machine Tools:

High-precision machine tools are one example of Japan’s last remaining card.

On February 25, 2025, the Financial Times reported, “China is struggling to master high-precision machine tools.”

– China has made progress in the fields of AI, renewable energy, semiconductors, and electric vehicles.

– However, it is struggling to develop cutting-edge (high-precision) machine tools, which are essential for manufacturing.

Japanese, European, and American companies are manufacturing high-end machine tools and supplying them to China.

https://news.yahoo.co.jp/expert/articles/c66548014d4069d45b11e5ced627b5b7094f9593