China has reportedly told its data center operators to source more than 50% of their chips from dome
By Dr. Eleanor Vance | Published on January 01, 0001
The Chinese government has reportedly mandated that its domestic data center operators nationwide should source more than 50 per cent of their chips from domestic producers.
The mandate is said to have originated in guidelines proposed last March for the Shanghai municipality, which stipulated that “adoption of domestic computing and storage chips at the city’s intelligent computing centres should be above 50 per cent by 2025" (via the ).
While the US government has recently decided to to the country once more, a requirement of 50% or more all-Chinese chips would likely affect [[link]] potential sales—although given the rate of expansion and the apparent popularity of Nvidia hardware in the country, I'd say it was still likely to shift a fair few units to Chinese shores.
The SCMP also reports that data centers are facing adaptation challenges in integrating Nvidia's hardware with domestic solutions. Nvidia's AI GPUs make use of Nvidia's CUDA software ecosystem, while Chinese models often use or similar. Integrating the two together is apparently quite the technical challenge, particularly if firms wish to min/max the number of faster Nvidia chips they're allowed to use.
Despite these issues, it should be noted that Chinese developers were still able to create under previous chip restrictions, an open-source alternative that shook the industry considerably at the start of this year. While China may be behind [[link]] in the hardware game, it doesn't appear to have held it back as much as advocates for may have hoped, with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang openly praising the Chinese AI industry last month.
In reference to fears of , Huang said:
"There's plenty of computing capacity in China already. If you just think about the number of supercomputers in China, built by amazing Chinese engineers, that are already in operation."
"They don't need [[link]] Nvidia's chips, certainly, or American tech stacks, in order to build their military."
How much of China's current AI output is being trained and run on Chinese hardware, compared to US equivalents, is currently unclear. Still, this mandate looks to be an attempt by the Chinese government to put curbs on a potential future US tech dominance within its AI industry, and ensure that Chinese AI hardware remains at the forefront of its AI development.

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