Nvidia-China

Nvidia can resume sale of H20 chips to China

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Written by Joseph Nordqvist

Published: 23:46, July 15, 2025

The US has just reversed its policy on AI chip exports. After blocking Nvidia from selling its H20 chips to China in April, Washington now says the sales can resume.

Nvidia said in a blog post: “The US government has assured Nvidia that licenses will be granted, and Nvidia hopes to start deliveries soon.”

Jensen Huang NVIDIA’s Founder, President and CEO, met with President Trump just last week before meeting with officials in Beijing.

Huang told reporters in Washington:

“General-purpose, open-source research and foundation models are the backbone of AI innovation. We believe that every civil model should run best on the U.S. technology stack, encouraging nations worldwide to choose America.”

But here’s the catch: this isn’t just about semiconductors.

US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick let slip that the chip approval is tied to China’s rare earth exports.

“We put that in the trade deal with the magnets,” Lutnick told Reuters.

For context, China had stopped shipping these essential minerals to the US back in March.

The US is easing AI-chip rules while China loosens its hold on rare-earth exports. Those minerals are vital for fighter jets, wind turbines and electric cars. It also explains how this flip-flop happened… In January, Lutnick said Nvidia should “stop helping” China. Then, a few months later, in April, the administration banned the H20. Now, in July, the decision has been reversed.

It’s also important to note that the H20, whilst powerful, isn’t Nvidia’s best chip.

After the Biden administration limited super-advanced chips from being exported to China, Nvidia engineered the H20 as a China-only product. The company’s more advanced chips, including the Blackwell line, H100, and H200, are still off-limits to Chinese customers.

The game of cat and mouse Nvidia has played since 2022:

DateUS Gov ActionNvidia Response
Sep 2022Informs Nvidia of A100/H100 AI chip exports to China Releases weaker A800/H800
Oct 2023Rule tightens again (performance-density test)Starts new H20/L20/L2 line intended for the Chinese market
Apr 2025Ban expands to H20Warns of $5 billion write-off
Jul 2025License path openedAnnounces restart of H20 sales to China

Each time regulators raised the bar, Nvidia shaved power or bandwidth to slip under it. The H20 cuts multi-GPU links and peak tensor math but still packs 96 GB of fast HBM3 memory. Regulators evidently view that as a tolerable middle ground.

Huang also announced a fully compliant NVIDIA RTX PRO GPU that “is ideal for digital twin AI for smart factories and logistics.” 

As reported by Bloomberg, AMD caught a break too. They’ll restart shipping their MI308 chips to China once licenses come through.

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