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China Asks Domestic Tech Firms To Halt Orders Of Nvidia Chips

Google Will Rely On Intel For 3Mn AI Chips in 2028

China Asks Domestic Tech Firms To Halt Orders Of Nvidia Chips

Imesh Ranasinghe

Imesh Ranasinghe

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Catenaa, Wednesday, January 07, 2026- China has asked some Chinese tech companies to halt orders for Nvidia H200 chips this week, and is expected to mandate ​domestic AI chip purchases.

Quoting sources, The Information reported on Wednesday that Beijing is aiming to discourage local technology companies from rushing to stockpile ‍US chips before a decision is reached.

Nvidia has been caught between Washington and Beijing, as the United States tightens controls ‌on exports of advanced semiconductors used in AI, while Chinese companies seek to reduce reliance on US-designed chips.

Tensions over technology trade have been a central feature of broader U.S.-China conflicts, with semiconductors emerging as a strategic flashpoint.

China’s directive to suspend orders was issued ⁠as the government considers whether, ‌and under what conditions, to allow access to Nvidia’s high-performance chips.

“China is committed to basing its national development on its own strengths, and is also willing to maintain dialogue and cooperation with ​all parties to safeguard the stability of global industrial and supply chains,” said ‌Liu Pengyu, a spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in the US, told Reuters.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said at the Consumer Electronics Show this week that demand in China ⁠for its H200 chip was strong and the ​company is viewing purchase orders as a signal ​of approval rather than expecting any formal announcement from Beijing.

US export licenses for the chips are still being processed, with no set timeline.

Late ‍last year, President ⁠Donald Trump’s administration approved the export of H200 chips to China, a significant reversal of previous bans on advanced AI hardware.

The approval was based on a ⁠condition that the company pay a unique 25% revenue-sharing tax to the US government.

The H200 is ‌the predecessor to Nvidia’s current flagship “Blackwell” chips.