Nvidia to restart production of China-bound chips

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Jensen Huang, chief executive officer of Nvidia, expects to generate at least US$1 trillion from its Blackwell and Rubin chips through the end of 2027. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

Mr Jensen Huang, chief executive of Nvidia, expects to generate at least US$1 trillion from its Blackwell and Rubin chips through the end of 2027.

PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

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  • Nvidia is restarting production of high-performance AI chips for Chinese clients, with supply chains "getting fired up".
  • US Commerce official stated no H200 AI chips have been sold to Chinese companies, despite softened export restrictions.
  • Top-of-the-range Nvidia chips remain banned for sale in China.

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- Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang on March 17 said the AI technology powerhouse is restarting production of its high-performance chips for clients in China.

“We have received purchase orders from many customers, and we’re in the process of restarting our manufacturing,” Mr Huang told journalists at Nvidia’s annual developers conference in San Jose, California.

“Our supply chain is getting fired up.”

The situation has changed from two weeks ago, according to Mr Huang.

A US commerce official in late February said a high-end Nvidia chip that can train and run artificial intelligence systems has not yet been sold to Chinese companies despite softened export restrictions.

The H200 chip had until recently been barred from sale in China by Washington over national security concerns.

US President Donald Trump said in December 2025 that he had reached an agreement with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping to ease the restrictions, a move some lawmakers have warned could help China’s military.

When asked by the US House Foreign Affairs Committee how many H200 chips had been sold to Chinese end-users, US Commerce Department export enforcement official David Peters said: “My understanding is that so far none have been sold.”

The H200 deal – under which the US government gets a 25 per cent cut of sales – was confirmed by the US Commerce Department in January. But conditions imposed on their sale have reportedly made it difficult for shipments to be approved.

“I think President Trump would like us to compete worldwide and not concede those markets unnecessarily,” Mr Huang said.

Beijing is ramping up domestic chip development and production in a bid to rival the industry-leading designs of California-based Nvidia, the world’s most valuable company.

Nvidia’s top-of-the-range chips, the Blackwell and forthcoming Rubin series, remain banned for sale in China and were not included in the H200 agreement.

When asked about Nvidia’s dependence on Taiwan-based chip producer TSMC and the potential for China to “act on” that territory, Mr Huang said: “My only hope is that we can all work together, stay at peace and look at the big picture.”

Mr Huang said a goal of the US Commerce Secretary to have 40 per cent of US chips made domestically will be “very challenging” to achieve, given how fast demand is growing. AFP

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