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Trump Says Microsoft to Make Changes to Limit Data Center Power Costs for Americans

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday that Microsoft will introduce “major changes” this week aimed at preventing American consumers from facing higher electricity bills due to the growing power demands of data centers.

In a post on social media, Trump said his administration is working closely with major U.S. technology companies to address rising utility costs linked to the rapid expansion of data centers, which underpin cloud computing and artificial intelligence services. He stressed that protecting households from higher energy prices was a priority.

“I never want Americans to pay higher Electricity bills because of Data Centers,” Trump said, adding that his administration is securing commitments from leading tech firms “to the American People,” with further announcements expected in the coming weeks.

Data centers have become a growing concern for policymakers as electricity demand surges across the United States, driven by AI workloads and large-scale cloud infrastructure. Utilities in several regions have warned that new data center projects could strain local power grids and push up costs for residential users.

Trump did not provide details on the specific changes Microsoft plans to implement, nor did he name other technology companies involved in the discussions. Microsoft has not yet publicly commented on the statement.

US Commerce Department Withdraws Plan to Restrict Chinese-Made Drones

The U.S. Commerce Department said on Friday it has dropped plans to impose new restrictions on Chinese-made drones aimed at addressing national security concerns, stepping back from a proposal that followed an earlier crackdown on passenger cars and trucks.

The decision comes after the Federal Communications Commission last month barred imports of new models of foreign-made drones and critical components on national security grounds, including products from China’s DJI and Autel. The FCC said this week it would exempt some non-Chinese drones from those restrictions.

The Commerce Department had said in September that it planned to issue rules that could restrict or potentially block imports of Chinese drones due to concerns over information and communications technology supply chains. The proposal was sent to the White House for review on October 8, but was formally withdrawn on Thursday, according to a government website posting released on Friday.

Under the FCC’s current measures, Chinese drone manufacturers cannot obtain the approvals needed to sell new drone models or key components in the United States. However, the rules do not ban the import, sale or use of existing drone models previously authorized, nor do they affect drones already purchased by users.

Records posted online show that the White House and the Commerce Department discussed the drone proposal through December 19 and met with DJI officials on December 11. During those discussions, DJI argued that blanket restrictions on drones manufactured in China would be “unnecessary, conceptually flawed, and extremely harmful to U.S. stakeholders.”

The withdrawal appears to be linked to a broader pause in actions targeting China ahead of a planned meeting in April between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, according to a government official briefed on the matter.

The Commerce Department had previously warned that threats from China and Russia could allow adversaries to remotely access or manipulate drone systems, potentially exposing sensitive U.S. data. It had also been considering restrictions on key drone systems such as onboard computers, communications equipment, flight control systems, operating software and data storage — measures that some experts said could amount to an effective ban on Chinese drones.

Chinese imports account for the majority of commercial drone sales in the United States, with DJI alone representing more than half of the market. Neither the Commerce Department nor DJI immediately responded to requests for comment.

US approves Samsung, SK Hynix chipmaking tool shipments to China for 2026, sources say

The U.S. government has approved annual licences allowing Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix to ship chipmaking equipment to their factories in China in 2026, according to two people familiar with the matter. The move offers temporary relief to the South Korean firms amid tightening U.S. export controls.

One source said Washington has introduced an annual approval system for exports of semiconductor manufacturing tools to China. The decision follows a U.S. move earlier this year to revoke licence waivers that had allowed certain technology companies to continue shipments with fewer restrictions.

Previously, Samsung, SK Hynix and TSMC benefited from exemptions under Washington’s broad chip export restrictions targeting China. That special status, known as validated end user (VEU), is set to expire on December 31. After that date, shipments of U.S.-origin chipmaking equipment to their Chinese facilities will require individual export licences.

Samsung and SK Hynix declined to comment, while TSMC did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The U.S. Department of Commerce was not available for comment outside business hours.

The policy shift reflects Washington’s broader effort to curb China’s access to advanced American technology. The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump has been reassessing export controls it considers overly permissive under the previous Biden administration, according to people familiar with the matter.

China remains a critical manufacturing base for Samsung and SK Hynix, particularly for legacy memory chips. Demand for such chips has surged amid rapid expansion of AI data centres and tighter global supply, underscoring why continued access to chipmaking tools for their Chinese plants remains strategically important for the South Korean companies.