According to China’s state television, Jensen Fan arrived in Beijing at the invitation of the China Council to promote international trade.
Tech Giant Nvidia CEO is in Beijing to strengthen regional trade ties after unveiling strict new export requirements for one of the key chips for the Chinese market this week.
According to Chinese state television, Jensen Fan arrived in Beijing at the invitation of the China Council to promote international trade, where he expressed his hope that the company could continue to work with China.
Huang’s visit comes days after the Trump administration announced that new export controls will be applied to Nvidia’s H20 AI chips. This is the only thing the company has offered in China without a special license.
The H20 chip, a bouncing version of Nvidia’s H100 chip, was created in 2022 to comply with the Biden administration’s restrictions on technology exports to China at the time.
The company’s AI chips have become a key focus of US export controls as authorities moved to ensure national security and to prevent authorities from being sold to China as they seek to ensure national security and preempt the competition for AI control.
The H20 co-accounts are declining, which means lower performance, but it can provide some important AI features, including the domain of inference.
That led to scrutiny that if they were collected in sufficient numbers, they could be used to build supercomputers using chips.
Additionally, according to the Select Committee, Deepseek had ordered thousands more tips, which he said was not entitled to buy.
China’s share of generating our sales has plummeted from over 25% to under 15% since 2021, according to the report.
However, it is possible that regional sales to Southeast Asia will be diverted to China or sold in the secondary market.
Therefore, Moolenaar and Krishnamoorthi have leaked information about entities that Nvidia has purchased over 500 AI-related chips since 2020, and requested that the company leak a copy of their communications with Deepseek.
While Nvidia’s future in China appears to be on the decline, the company has announced a major initiative to pivot some of its most important manufacturing capabilities into US soil.
Huang said the company’s new US infrastructure investment will be more than $50 trillion over the next four years, including support from international partners such as Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturers.