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China adds AI chips to secure technology assessment list amid US curbs

South China Morning Post Howard Liu 0 переглядів 2 хв читання
China adds AI chips to secure technology assessment list amid US curbs
AdvertisementArtificial intelligenceTechPolicyChina adds AI chips to secure technology assessment list amid US curbs

The latest list extends China’s trusted technology certification system to cover AI processors as Beijing pushes the use of home-grown chips

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The newly certified chip products include Huawei’s Ascend 910. Photo: Shutterstock Images
Howard Liuin BeijingPublished: 2:00pm, 27 May 2026Updated: 2:21pm, 27 May 2026

For the first time, China has included artificial intelligence chips in its official “secure and reliable” technology assessments, expanding the scope of a state-backed drive to adopt domestic alternatives to Western products.

The China Information Technology Security Evaluation Centre and the National Secrecy Science and Technology Evaluation Centre released the latest batch of assessments on Tuesday evening, creating a new category for “AI training and inference chips”. The certifications were valid for three years, according to the announcement.

As the country’s official assessment bodies for information security and secrecy-related technologies, their approvals are widely viewed as the definitive procurement catalogue for party and government agencies, central state-owned enterprises and other state-linked customers under the Xinchuang initiative.

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Xinchuang, which translates as information technology application innovation, is Beijing’s long-running campaign to purge foreign hardware and software from sensitive and strategically important information systems.

The move highlights how China’s technology replacement drive is pivoting towards AI infrastructure. Initially focused on phasing out US suppliers like Intel and Advanced Micro Devices for central processing units (CPUs) and Oracle for databases, Beijing is now targeting Nvidia and other foreign suppliers of AI computing power.

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The push has gained urgency following successive rounds of US export controls that restricted Chinese access to advanced graphics processing units (GPUs).

Nvidia’s H200 graphics processing unit. Photo: Handout
Nvidia’s H200 graphics processing unit. Photo: Handout
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