On April 16, 2025, the Department of Commerce announced that it initiated an investigation on April 1, 2025, under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act, into imports of semiconductors, semiconductor manufacturing equipment (SME), and related products to evaluate how those imports may impact national security.

The investigation extends beyond standalone semiconductor components, reaching into the broader electronics supply chain. It includes finished products embedding semiconductors, such as smartphones, laptops, tablets, and similar devices. Based on the application of the Section 232 tariff on steel and aluminum derivatives, if any downstream products becomes covered by this Section 232 investigation, it is likely that importers will need to pay a duty for those finished products based on the value of the incorporated semiconductors.

The scope of the investigation also covers various elements critical to the semiconductor industry, including semiconductor substrates, bare wafers, legacy chips, leading-edge chips, microelectronics, and SME components.

The Department of Commerce is seeking public comments on several national security-related issues surrounding semiconductor imports:

The comment period is open for 21 days from publication, closing on May 7th, 2025. Interested parties may submit their written comments, data, analyses, or other relevant information through the Federal rulemaking portal at www.regulations.gov under docket ID BIS-2025-0021.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *