Huawei has unveiled a sweeping AI infrastructure initiative designed to dramatically boost China’s domestic compute power just as Beijing moves to restrict Nvidia’s market presence. At its Huawei Connect conference, the company introduced a “SuperPoD Interconnect” technology capable of linking together up to 15,000 graphics cards—including its own Ascend AI chips—to scale up compute. Meanwhile, China’s Cyberspace Administration (CAC) has barred major tech firms such as Alibaba and ByteDance from acquiring Nvidia’s AI chips (in particular the RTX Pro 6000D and H20 models), mandating cancellation of current and future orders. The moves reflect a broader strategy by Chinese authorities to lean harder into self-reliance in semiconductors and reduce exposure to U.S. export control regimes.
Sources: Reuters, AP News, TechRadar
Key Takeaways
– Huawei is accelerating its efforts to build AI compute infrastructure domestically (e.g. its new SuperPoD Interconnect linking thousands of GPUs/NPUs) to replace reliance on foreign suppliers like Nvidia.
– Chinese regulators have officially banned domestic tech giants from buying certain Nvidia AI chips—such as the RTX Pro 6000D and H20—and ordered cancellation of existing orders, as part of a push toward domestic alternatives.
– The broader context includes increasing U.S. export restrictions on semiconductors, which have created an environment where China is more aggressively investing in its own chip design, manufacturing, and system-level integration to achieve strategic autonomy in AI.
In-Depth
China’s AI race is shifting into high gear, with Beijing pushing hard for homegrown capacity just as its access to foreign hardware—especially from Nvidia—is being curtailed. Huawei’s latest infrastructure announcement is emblematic of this pivot. At Huawei Connect, the company rolled out a “SuperPoD Interconnect” system that can tie together up to 15,000 graphics cards (including its Ascend chips), enabling large-scale compute for AI workloads domestically. This move is meant to compensate for severed supply lines and regulatory pressure.
At nearly the same moment, Chinese tech regulation tightened sharply: the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) has told major players like ByteDance and Alibaba to cease both ordering and testing of Nvidia’s RTX Pro 6000D, and to cancel pending orders for the H20 chip. The rationale Ministry-wise (or at least for the regulators) is twofold: one, national security and risk of dependence; two, belief that domestic technologies are now sufficient to compete and replace imported alternatives. Analysts say that Chinese AI chipmakers—Huawei among them—are now producing designs that, in certain metrics, begin to approach or rival Nvidia’s restricted-models.
But it’s no simple substitution. Even as domestic infrastructure scales up, challenges remain: software ecosystems, power and cooling demands, efficiency, supply of advanced fabrication, and international components (e.g. memory, interconnects) still often depend on global suppliers. Meanwhile, on the U.S./export control side, restrictions are tightening, meaning China must innovate around both hardware and supply chain constraints.
Overall, the current moment could be a turning point: a test of whether China can not only build AI hardware at scale, but also deploy models, training, and inference pipelines that compete in efficiency, reliability, and performance with global leaders. If successful, it may reshape the global AI hardware landscape, reducing Nvidia’s dominance in certain sectors while intensifying competition and strategic decoupling.

