Nvidia co-founder and CEO Jensen Huang in Las Vegas, Nevada, on January 5, 2026.Patrick T. Fallon/AFP/Getty ImagesChinese officials have reportedly asked some of their local tech companies to halt orders for Nvidia’s H200 AI chips.
The move foreshadows a mandate on purchasing domestic AI silicon,
according to a report from The Information.
That places Jensen Huang-led Nvidia right back into the simmering trade war-turned-AI arms race between China and the U.S.
For a time, it seemed like there would be a brief reprieve. As tit-for-tat tariffs spiraled, both countries eased their rhetoric in a bid to avoid wanton economic destruction.
But there’s talk and then there’s walk.
Even as the U.S. allowed more industry-leading, U.S.-made AI chips into China, Beijing has moved to discourage domestic tech firms from using them in favor of homegrown alternatives.
Nvidia’s H200 (H is for “Hopper,” as in the computer scientist Grace) is considered to be a generation behind Nvidia’s flagship B200 “Blackwell” AI chips. This week, Nvidia shared more details about the forthcoming “Rubin” generation that will replace Blackwell.
At a press conference at the CES trade show in Las Vegas this week, Nvidia’s chief said Chinese demand for H200 chips was “very high,” and that purchase orders implied approval from Beijing.
“We’ve fired up our supply chain,” Huang said, “and H200s are flowing through the line.”
—AN