China's military and government acquire Nvidia chips despite US ban
Send a link to a friend
[January 15, 2024] By
Eduardo Baptista
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese military bodies, state-run artificial
intelligence research institutes and universities have over the past
year purchased small batches of Nvidia semiconductors banned by the U.S.
from export to China, a Reuters review of tender documents show.
The sales by largely unknown Chinese suppliers highlight the
difficulties Washington faces, despite its bans, in completely cutting
off China's access to advanced U.S. chips that could fuel breakthroughs
in AI and sophisticated computers for its military.
Buying or selling high-end U.S. chips is not illegal in China and the
publicly available tender documents show dozens of Chinese entities have
bought and taken receipt of Nvidia semiconductors since restrictions
were imposed.
These include its A100 and the more powerful H100 chip - whose exports
to China and Hong Kong were banned in September 2022 - as well as the
slower A800 and H800 chips Nvidia then developed for the Chinese market
but which were also banned last October.
The graphic processing units - a type of chip - that are built by Nvidia
are widely seen as far superior to rival products for AI work as they
can more efficiently process huge amounts of data needed for
machine-learning tasks.
The continued demand for and access to banned Nvidia chips also
underlines the lack of good alternatives for Chinese firms despite the
nascent development of rival products from Huawei and others. Prior to
the bans, Nvidia commanded a 90% share of China's AI chip market.
Purchasers included elite universities as well as two entities subject
to U.S. export restrictions - the Harbin Institute of Technology and the
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, which have
been accused of involvement in military matters or being affiliated to a
military body contrary to U.S. national interest.
The former purchased six Nvidia A100 chips in May to train a
deep-learning model. The latter purchased one A100 in December 2022. Its
purpose was not identified.
None of the purchasers mentioned in this article responded to requests
for comment.
The Reuters review found neither Nvidia nor retailers approved by the
company were among the suppliers identified. It was not clear how the
suppliers have procured their Nvidia chips.
In the wake of U.S. curbs, however, an underground market for such chips
in China has sprung up. Chinese vendors have previously said they snatch
up excess stock that finds its way to the market after Nvidia ships
large quantities to big U.S. firms, or import through companies locally
incorporated in places such as India, Taiwan and Singapore.
Reuters sought comment from 10 of the suppliers listed in tender
documents including those mentioned in this article - none of them
answered.
Nvidia said it complies with all applicable export control laws and
requires its customers to do the same.
"If we learn that a customer has made an unlawful resale to third
parties, we'll take immediate and appropriate action," a company
spokesperson said.
[to top of second column] |
NVIDIA logo is seen near computer motherboard in this illustration
taken January 8, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
The U.S. Department of Commerce declined to comment. U.S.
authorities have vowed to close loopholes in the export restrictions
and have moved to limit access to the chips by units of Chinese
companies located outside China.
Chris Miller, professor at Tufts University and author of "Chip War:
The Fight for the World's Most Critical Technology", said it was
unrealistic to think U.S. export restrictions could be watertight
given that chips are small and can easily be smuggled.
The main aim is "to throw sand in the gears of China's AI
development" by making it difficult to build large clusters of
advanced chips capable of training AI systems, he added.
MILITARY, AI BUYERS
The review includes more than 100 tenders where state entities have
procured A100 chips and dozens of tenders since the October ban show
purchases of the A800.
Tenders published last month also show Tsinghua University procured
two H100 chips while a laboratory run by the Ministry of Industry
and Information Technology procured one.
The buyers include one unnamed People's Liberation Army entity based
in the city of Wuxi, Jiangsu province, according to tenders from a
military database. It sought 3 A100 chips in October and one H100
chip this month.
Military tenders in China are often heavily redacted and Reuters was
not able to learn who won the bids or the reason for the purchase.
Most tenders show the chips are being used for AI. The quantities of
most purchases are, however, very small, far from what's needed to
build a sophisticated AI large language model from scratch.
A model similar to OpenAI's GPT would require more than 30,000
Nvidia A100 cards, according to research firm TrendForce. But a
handful can run complex machine-learning tasks and enhance existing
AI models.
In one example, the Shandong Artificial Intelligence Institute
awarded a 290,000 yuan ($40,500) contract for 5 A100 chips to
Shandong Chengxiang Electronic Technology last month.
Many of the tenders stipulate suppliers have to deliver and install
the products before receiving payment. Most universities also
published notices showing the transaction was completed.
Tsinghua University, dubbed China's Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, is a prolific issuer of tenders and has purchased some
80 A100 chips since the 2022 ban.
In December, Chongqing University published a tender for one A100
chip that explicitly stated it could not be second-hand or
disassembled but had to be "brand new". The delivery was completed
this month, a notice showed.
($1 = 7.1592 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Eduardo Baptista; Additional reporting by Josh Ye in
Hong Kong and Brenda Goh in Shanghai; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |