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China Blocks Use of Foreign AI Chips in State Data Centres

Chinese regulators have banned the use of foreign chips in data centres supported by state funds, saying they must only use locally-made computer chips, sources say.


A stock image showing a chip with China's flag on it
The US and China are engaged in fierce rivalry for tech supremacy and a key focus has been production of AI computer chips. Image: Freepik; edited by Aarushi Agrawal.

 

The Chinese government has reportedly issued orders saying that new data centres supported by state funds must only use locally-made computer chips.

Two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters that Chinese regulators recently ordered that officials overseeing data centres which are less than 30% finished must remove all foreign chips that have been installed, or cancel plans to purchase them.

And they said that decisions on chips used in projects that are at a more advanced stage would be made on a case-by-case basis.

 

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The move – one of China’s most aggressive steps yet to eliminate foreign technology from its critical infrastructure, during a pause in trade hostilities between Washington and Beijing – appears to have been instigated in a quest for AI chip self-sufficiency.

China’s access to advanced AI chips, including those made by Nvidia, has been a key point of friction with the US, as the two wrestle for dominance in high-end computing power and AI.

US President Donald Trump said in an interview aired on Sunday following talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping last week that Washington will “let them deal with Nvidia but not in terms of the most advanced” chips.

The latest move by Beijing, however, would dash Nvidia’s hopes of regaining Chinese market share, while giving local rivals, such as Huawei, yet another opportunity to secure more chip sales.

It is unclear whether the guidance applies to data centres nationwide or only to certain provinces, sources said. They did not identify which Chinese regulatory bodies had issued the order, and declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the matter.

Besides Nvidia, other foreign chipmakers that sell data centre chips to China include AMD and Intel.

The Cyberspace Administration of China and the National Development and Reform Commission, two of Beijing’s most powerful regulators, did not respond to requests for comment. Nvidia and AMD did not respond, while Intel declined to comment.

 

Projects suspended, anger at US curbs

AI data centre projects in China have drawn over $100 billion in state funding since 2021, according to a Reuters review of government tenders.

Most data centres in China have received some form of state funding to aid their construction, but it is not immediately clear how many projects are subject to the new guidance.

Some projects have already been suspended before breaking ground as a result of the directive, including a facility in a province in the northwest that had planned to deploy Nvidia chips, one of the sources said.

The project, being developed by a private technology company that received state funding, has been put on hold, the source said.

Beijing has long been irked by Washington’s export controls aimed at impeding China’s tech progress and has taken a series of measures, including retaliatory moves, to wean itself off US technology.

The US has justified its restrictions by alleging that the Chinese military would use the chips to increase its capabilities.

China discouraged local tech giants from purchasing advanced Nvidia chips over security concerns this year, while showing off a new data centre powered solely by domestic AI chips.

And in 2023, Beijing banned the use of Micron’s products in its critical infrastructure, which paved the way for a decision this year by the largest US memory chipmaker to exit the server chip market in China, Reuters reported last month.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has repeatedly lobbied Trump and his cabinet to allow the sale of more AI chips China, arguing that keeping its superpower rival’s AI industry dependent on US hardware was good for America’s interests.

Its current share of the Chinese AI chip market is zero, compared to 95% in 2022, according to the company.

Excluding foreign chipmakers like Nvidia from big state projects would eliminate a significant portion of their China revenue, even as a deal is agreed to allow the resumption of advanced chip sales to China.

The new guidance on data centres covers Nvidia’s H20 chips, the most advanced AI chip the US firm is allowed to sell to China, but also more powerful processors such as the B200 and H200, the sources said.

While the B200 and H200 are barred from being shipped to China by US export controls, they remain widely available in China through grey-market channels.

 

Bigger sales for local chipmakers

With the latest directive, the Chinese government is carving out even more market share for domestic chipmakers. China has a range of AI chip companies, from the most prominent, Huawei Technologies, to smaller players such as the Shanghai-listed Cambricon and startups including MetaX, Moore Threads, and Enflame.

Products from these Chinese companies already rival some of Nvidia’s offerings, but they have struggled to crack the market. Developers used to Nvidia’s reliable software ecosystem have been reluctant to adopt domestic alternatives.

While the move would help boost sales of domestically developed chips, it also risks widening the US-China gap in AI computing power.

US tech giants like Microsoft, Meta, and OpenAI have spent or allocated hundreds of billions of dollars to build data centres powered by Nvidia’s most advanced chips.

Meanwhile, leading Chinese chip manufacturers like SMIC are facing supply constraints due to US sanctions on semiconductor manufacturing equipment that have hit advanced chip production capacity.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.