Chinese firms are planning to install more than 115,000 Nvidia AI chips, including H100 and H200 models, in approximately 39 data centers located primarily in the western deserts of China, notably in the Xinjiang and Qinghai regions. These data centers, approved in the fourth quarter of 2024 by local governments, are part of China's broader strategy to enhance its artificial intelligence capabilities. The Nvidia chips intended for these projects are currently banned under U.S. export restrictions, raising questions about how the hardware will be acquired. One company involved, DeepSeek, has expressed interest in collaborating on these developments. Construction of the data centers is already underway, aiming to create a substantial computing infrastructure to support China's AI ambitions.
$NVDA (+0.4% pre) China Wants 115,000 Nvidia Chips to Power Data Centers in the Desert - BBG https://t.co/ka0pmBmeF2
A Bloomberg News analysis shows Chinese firms aim to install more than 115,000 Nvidia Corp. AI chips in some three dozen data centers across the country’s western deserts.https://t.co/4tdarc9oRT via @bbgvisualdata
New: Chinese firms aim to install ~115,000 advanced Nvidia chips in dozens of AI data centers. Construction is underway. DeepSeek wants to collaborate What’s unclear is how they plan to get hardware that the US has effectively banned from sale to China 🧵https://t.co/R9MhZhK5RR