Analog Devices Ltd

Analog Devices, Inc. operates at the centre of the modern digital economy, converting real-world phenomena into actionable insight with its comprehensive suite of analogue and mixed signal, power management, radio frequency (RF), and digital and sensor technologies. ADI serves 125,000 customers worldwide with more than 75,000 products in the industrial, communications, automotive, and consumer markets. ADI is headquartered in Wilmington, MA. Visit www.analog.com. Both Linear Technology and Maxim Integrated are now part of Analog Devices.

Analog Devices provide efficient solutions for power management and power conversion applications in the automotive, telecommunications, industrial, medical, computing, military and high-end consumer markets using high-performance analogue ICs. Our power ICs can provide unrivalled power densities and software design simulation tools to provide both fast and accurate power module and power supply designs.

Products for power management include: switching regulators, linear regulators (LDO), µModule regulators, PMIC & Multifunction, inductorless (charge pump) DC/DC converters, LED driver ICs, power control, battery management,  current source, system supervisor, hot-swap controllers,  monitor and control, energy harvesting, super capacitor chargers and power management evaluation kits.

Analog Devices urges US and EU to lower barriers to high-tech trade in roundtable discussion with US Department of Commerce officials

Analog Devices urges US and EU to lower barriers to high-tech trade in roundtable discussion with US Department of Commerce officials

In a visit to Analog Devices’ booth at the Hannover Trade Fair following the roundtable, Office of Business Liaison Director from the US government’s Department of Commerce Patrick Wilson sees how production of advanced electronics systems relies on complex transatlantic supply chains

Hannover, Germany (8 April 2019) – Joining a roundtable with the US government’s Department of Commerce to discuss US/European Union trade arrangements on the second day of the Hannover Trade Fair, Analog Devices urged both sides to step up efforts to break down non-tariff barriers to trade in technology components and systems.

Analog Devices, a global manufacturer of semiconductor-based technology solutions and systems, told Patrick Wilson, Office of Business Liaison Director at the Department of Commerce, that regulatory burdens imposed by both the EU and the US impeded the transatlantic exchange of components and systems in important markets for high technology such as industrial and building automation, communications, automotive, and aerospace and defense equipment.

The Department of Commerce invited Analog Devices to participate in the roundtable discussion at the Hannover Trade Fair (Hannover Messe, 1-5 April). It was part of a four-month long consultation organized by the Office of Business Liaison, the goal of which is to help US trade negotiators better understand the issues that US exporters and multinationals, such as Analog Devices, face when doing business in the EU.

This consultation follows a pledge made by President Trump in October 2018 to negotiate a trade agreement with the EU. Trade between the EU and the US is worth some $1.1tn a year.

As part of his consultation with large US-based multinationals, Patrick Wilson visited the Analog Devices booth at the Hannover Messe, which had earlier been on the route of a tour of the exhibition made by Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel. Mr Wilson saw how the company’s sophisticated solutions consisting of semiconductor hardware and software, including embedded artificial intelligence, are integrated into robotics, wind turbines and smart asset management tools.  End products such as these depend on a fast-moving and intricate transatlantic supply chain for high-technology components and systems.

Analog Devices’ representative at the roundtable, EMEA Senior Sales Director Josef Lechner, said to Mr. Wilson that while electronics components such as semiconductors were not subject to damaging tariffs, compliance with onerous regulations such as the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) or the US’s International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) inhibited the export trade in technology components and systems.

Mr Lechner told Mr Wilson that Analog Devices would like to see ITAR compliance streamlined for certified companies operating in member nations of the NATO alliance.

Analog Devices also called for EU funding for technology and innovation initiatives to be available as readily to the European subsidiaries of US companies as it is to large indigenous European companies.

About Analog Devices

Analog Devices is a leading global high-performance analog technology company dedicated to solving the toughest engineering challenges.  We enable our customers to interpret the world around us by intelligently bridging the physical and digital with unmatched technologies that sense, measure, power, connect and interpret. Visit http://www.analog.com.

Follow ADI on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/ADI_News

 

Subscribe to Analog Dialogue, ADI’s monthly technical journal, at:

http://www.analog.com/library/analogDialogue/

 

All registered trademarks and trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

Contacts:

Jackie Rutter

Director Marketing EMEA at Analog Devices

+44 7581 573724

jackie.rutter@analog.com

 

Alan Timmins

Mainly Marketing Services    

a.timmins@ntlworld.com

Tel: +44 1252 629937

Return to Analog Devices Ltd News Index

Buy from Analog Devices Ltd

Request a Quote