A growing diplomatic rift between South Africa and Taiwan is sparking concern across the tech and AI sectors, with experts warning that potential chip export restrictions could stall digital innovation, data center operations, and economic growth.
Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs says it is weighing curbs on semiconductor exports in response to what it calls South Africa’s “crude” downgrade of its diplomatic mission — a move linked to Pretoria’s firm adherence to the “One China” policy.
While South Africa is not currently a major buyer of Taiwanese chips, industry leaders caution that Taiwan’s dominance in cutting-edge semiconductor manufacturing gives the potential restriction outsized influence.
Why It Matters
“Many of Africa’s AI and data infrastructure systems run on Taiwanese chips,” says Prof. Japie Greeff of Belgium Campus iTversity. “Any disruption could directly impact our rollout of advanced technologies like agentic AI.”
South Africa imported around R8.8 million worth of integrated circuits from Taiwan in 2023, according to UN Comtrade, but analysts warn the consequences go beyond trade figures.
“Semiconductors are essential to telecoms, smart devices, and even public sector digitisation,” says Dr. Ernst van Biljon of IMM Graduate School. “Restrictions would ripple across industries — raising costs, slowing projects, and delaying national innovation goals.”
Political Fallout
The controversy stems from South Africa’s 2023 decision to relocate Taiwan’s representative office from Pretoria to Johannesburg and rebrand it as a Trade Office — a symbolic downgrade. Taiwan called the move an affront to its sovereignty. Pretoria maintains the change aligns with its longstanding diplomatic recognition of Beijing.
Taiwanese officials say any export measures would aim to “protect national dignity,” though details remain under consideration.
Industry Reacts
While tech players like Mustek say it’s too early to gauge the fallout, ICT experts warn of longer-term damage if relations sour further. IDC’s Mark Walker and SITA’s Jannie Zaaiman suggest the biggest risks lie in hardware supply chains and advanced computing.
Adrian Schofield, an industry analyst, says the danger lies in escalation: “The real risk would come if manufacturers that use Taiwanese chips joined any blockade.”
The Need for Local Solutions
The tension has reignited calls for Africa to invest in its own chip manufacturing. But experts caution that building competitive capacity will require massive capital and long-term commitment.
“There is no short-term fix,” says van Biljon. “South Africa lacks the infrastructure to produce commercial-grade semiconductors at scale.”
Greeff agrees: “It would be wise to reinvest in this capability for strategic independence — but the price tag will be high.”
Political Pressure Mounts
The Democratic Alliance slammed the ANC government’s handling of the Taiwan issue, warning that “future economic growth requires semiconductor access.” DA MP Ryan Smith urged immediate talks with Taiwan to avoid “needless risks to our tech and export sectors.”
Zaaiman concludes that South Africa must tread carefully: “We need a pragmatic foreign policy that protects both national dignity and technological security.”