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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang reaffirmed his commitment to Taiwan on Monday as a global technology hub and announced the construction of a new local headquarters in Taipei and an artificial intelligence supercomputer that will use thousands of company chips.
The move comes as President Donald Trump’s administration is pushing technology companies to increase production in US soil. Huang is trying to navigate new tariffs and export controls that threaten the massive sales of Nvidia’s AI chips, which rely heavily on the supply chain in Taiwan.
Speaking at Taipei’s Computex Tech Show, Huang also announced a variety of new products aimed at embedding the company’s technology at the heart of the AI infrastructure industry.
Huang paid tribute to Taiwan, the “world’s largest electronics manufacturing region,” and said it was “the heart of the computer ecosystem.”
Foxconn’s subsidiary Big Innovation Company, in collaboration with Nvidia and the Taiwanese government, will build AI supercomputers using 10,000 Nvidia’s latest Blackwell chips, which will be used by Taiwan’s technological ecosystems. Investments can reach hundreds of millions of dollars based on estimates of the cost of individual tips.
500 million dollars
Nvidia’s 4-Year Expense Plan for US AI Infrastructure
Its customers include Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturers, Nvidia’s leading manufacturing partners.
“We are growing beyond the limits of our current office (Taiwan),” Fan said as he revealed a video of the landing of a futuristic spaceship transforming into a design for a new “constellations” headquarters, which will soon begin construction in the capital’s Beitou district.
The plan reflects wider spending trends by Nvidia, which has become a $30 company in just a few years. Huang, for example, has promised to spend up to $500 million on the US AI infrastructure over the next four years, along with partners including Taiwan’s TSMC, Foxconn and Wistron.
But moving high-tech manufacturing to the US took years, and in a short demo video, Huang spoke about how multiple high-tech companies are making the latest chips from Taiwan-based Nvidia.
Nvidia’s Chief has announced the ‘nvlink Fusion’ initiative aimed at combining the company’s technology with the custom-designed products of competitors.
The move will enhance Nvidia’s ecosystem as a go-to solution for the infrastructure running its technology, while opening its ecosystem to new chip players. Large companies such as Google and Amazon are working to build their own AI chip technologies and are aiming to bring more technology in-house to reduce reliance on market leaders.
Huang said the new feature will allow competing chips to connect to Nvidia’s graphics processing unit and its NVLink networking technology.
“Nothing gives me more joy than when I buy everything from Nvidia. But if I just buy something from Nvidia, it gives me great joy,” he said.
Fans are in Taiwan following a tour last week of President Trump’s stopping hist on the Gulf Coast. Both Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates are committed to multi-billion-dollar AI infrastructure projects.
This follows the revocation of Biden-era regulations administrations that would have restricted Nvidia’s major AI chip exports to dozens of countries. At the same time, Trump cracked down on exports of Nvidia’s H20, the native AI chip of China.
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Unsettled by fans who arrived in Taiwan on Friday and asked fans to sign hats and baseball, Huang told reporters that Trump’s involvement in the Gulf trade had supported a “world where Nvidia technology can be accessed to build AI infrastructure.”
When asked about the possibility that Nvidia will build new China chips that comply with the latest export controls, Huang said the company is “assessing the best way for the Chinese market,” but said further changes to H20 are not feasible.
The company is considering how it will redesign its chips to continue selling in China, while adhering to US controls. The Financial Times reported last week that Nvidia is planning to build a new research facility in Shanghai with signs of a country’s commitment.
Huang added that “there is no evidence of a conversion of AI chips” to China. He added that this is concerns that US lawmakers motivated the company to write letters last month.