According to a Reuters, despite the U.S. expanding export controls on advanced artificial intelligence (AI) chips to China last year, Chinese universities and research institutions have recently acquired high-end AI chips from Nvidia through distributors.
Reviewing hundreds of bidding documents, Reuters found that since the U.S. expanded chip export controls on November 17 last year, ten Chinese entities have acquired Nvidia’s advanced chips embedded in server products produced by U.S. firms Supermicro, Dell, and Taiwanese company Gigabyte Technology.
Based on this Reuters report, bidding documents not reported from November 20 last year to February 28 this year show that Chinese institutions such as the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shandong Artificial Intelligence Institute, Hubei Earthquake Administration, Shandong University, Southwest University, a technology investment company owned by the Heilongjiang Provincial Government, a state-owned aerospace research center, and a space science center have purchased these server products from distributors, which include some of Nvidia’s most advanced chips.
In response, a Nvidia spokesperson told Reuters that the products involved in these bids were exported before the ban was implemented in the United States. The spokesperson stated that the report does not imply that Nvidia or any of its partners violated export control regulations, and the proportion of these products in global sales is negligible. Nvidia complies with U.S. regulatory standards.
Both Supermicro and Dell stated that they would investigate and take action if any third-party illegal exports or re-exports are found. Gigabyte, the Taiwanese company mentioned in the report, told the Central News Agency that it has fully complied with relevant regulations since the chip ban took effect on November 17 last year, and has not shipped any restricted products to China. Gigabyte reiterated its strict adherence to relevant Taiwanese laws and international embargo regulations, stating that there has been no violation of any embargo regulations.
In 2023, the United States further restricted Chinese businesses from acquiring high-end AI chips. At that time, Nvidia responded by launching a China-specific version, the H20. TrendForce also presented relevant data for the Chinese market, indicating that Chinese CSP companies, including ByteDance, Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent (BBAT), accounted for approximately 6.3% of high-end AI server shipments in 2023. Considering the ban and subsequent risks, it is estimated that the proportion in 2024 may be less than 4%.
(Photo credit: NVIDIA)