US Launches Review of Advanced Nvidia AI Chip Sales to China, Sources Say

Reuters12-19 09:43

Trump administration move could pave way for Nvidia H200 chip sales to China

Commerce Department sends license applications for interagency review

Concerns remain over chips boosting China's military and AI capabilities

(Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's administration has launched a review that could result in the first shipments to China of Nvidia's second-most powerful AI chips, five sources said, making good on his pledge to allow the controversial sales.

Trump this month said he would allow sales of Nvidia's H200 chips to China, with the U.S. government collecting a 25% fee, and that the sales would help keep U.S. firms ahead of Chinese chipmakers by cutting demand for Chinese chips.

But questions have remained about how quickly the U.S. might approve such sales and whether Beijing would allow Chinese firms to purchase the Nvidia chips.

Reuters reported last week that Nvidia was considering an increase to production of the H200, the immediate predecessor to its current flagship Blackwell chips, after initial orders from China outstripped the current capacity.

The U.S. Commerce Department, which oversees export policy, has sent license applications for chip shipments to the State, Energy and Defense Departments for review, the sources said on condition of anonymity because the process is not public.

Those agencies have 30 days to weigh in, according to export regulations, with the ultimate decision falling to Trump if agency officials disagree. The start of the inter-agency licensing review has not been reported previously.

The Commerce Department and Nvidia did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

A White House spokesperson did not comment on the review, but said "the Trump administration is committed to ensuring the dominance of the American tech stack – without compromising on national security.”

U.S. HAD BANNED H200 SALES TO CHINA

While the H200 chips are slower than Nvidia's Blackwell chips at many AI tasks, they remain in wide use in the industry and have never been allowed for sale in China.

Trump had previously opened the door to sales of a less-advanced version of Nvidia's Blackwell chips, its cutting-edge offering, but backed away from the move and approved sales of the H200 instead.

Led by White House AI czar David Sacks, several members of the Trump administration now argue that shipping advanced AI chips to China discourages Chinese competitors like Huawei from redoubling efforts to catch up with Nvidia and AMD's AMD.O most-advanced chip designs.

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Comments

  • CaptainLai
    05:49
    CaptainLai
    China is not interested in second class chips and at the whimsical attitudes of Americans. 
  • alexliam
    12-19 10:27
    alexliam
    This is fantastic news for Nvidia!
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