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  • Nvidia Gets U.S. Approval To Resume Sales Of China H20 Chip

Nvidia Gets U.S. Approval To Resume Sales Of China H20 Chip

The U.S. government has agreed to grant export licenses for Nvidia’s China-specific H20 AI chip, after months of restrictions and lobbying.

July 15, 2025Clash Report

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The H20 chip was designed to comply with previous U.S. restrictions but was swept up in a wider export crackdown in April. Nvidia, warning that the U.S. could lose AI leadership to Chinese firms like Huawei, launched an aggressive lobbying campaign to resume sales. That effort included direct talks between CEO Jensen Huang and President Trump.

The U.S. has now signaled its willingness to approve export licenses for the H20, and Nvidia said it hopes to begin deliveries “soon.” Huang is currently visiting Beijing to update Chinese partners and seek high-level meetings, including with Premier Li Qiang — a sign of Nvidia’s rising role as a diplomatic actor in the U.S.-China tech rivalry.

New Chips, New Rules

In tandem with the H20 license breakthrough, Nvidia unveiled plans to release a new GPU for China based on the RTX Pro 6000 platform. The chip will comply with updated U.S. export rules but is designed to meet Chinese demand for AI and industrial applications. Huang emphasized that “every civil model should run best on the U.S. technology stack.”

Despite Beijing’s efforts to promote domestic AI chips from Huawei, Cambricon, and Biren, Nvidia’s ecosystem remains the dominant choice due to its maturity and developer accessibility. Demand for AI chips surged in China following the release of DeepSeek’s R1 model earlier this year.

Nvidia’s maneuver reflects a broader trend: navigating regulatory pressure while protecting market share in one of the world’s largest tech economies.

Sources:

Financial Times

Related Topics

Nvidia
H20 Chip
U.S. Export Controls
AI Chips
China
Jensen Huang
U.S.-China Tech War
RTX Pro 6000
Semiconductors
Washington Approval
Huawei
DeepSeek
AI Regulation
Commerce Department
Chip Diplomacy
Beijing Meetings
U.S. Technology
Blackwell GPU
China AI Market

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