His comments come as Huawei assumes an increasingly important role in China’s self-sufficiency drive, as Nvidia is unable to ship to the country its advanced GPUs under strict US export restrictions.
Huawei first introduced the Ascend chip series in 2019, four months after the company was added to a US trade blacklist. Since then, its AI strategy has focused on building an ecosystem of proprietary software and hardware designed to serve domestic clients that have lost access to equivalent technology overseas.
Zhang Dixuan, head of Huawei’s Ascend computing business, revealed last month that the Ascend ecosystem had 40 hardware partners, 1,600 software partners and 2,900 AI application solutions.
Despite its ambitions, Huawei has rarely spoken publicly about its efforts to free itself from the shackles of US sanctions aimed at stemming China’s technological advancement in semiconductors and AI.
The company has closely guarded the source of the advanced mobile chips that power the Mate 60 smartphone series launched last August – its first 5G handsets in more than two years.
But analysts have said it would be challenging for Chinese manufacturers to produce high-performance AI computing chips using older systems because in general, AI chips are much bigger than smartphone chips. For example, Nvidia’s A100 is eight times larger than Apple’s A13 mobile processor.
Nvidia has designed lower-grade chips tailored for China-based clients to keep serving one of the company’s largest markets. In the first half of last year, Nvidia processors made up 90 per cent of the 500,000 AI chips that were sold in China, with Huawei grabbing only 6 per cent of the market.
But after Washington in October escalated its export curbs to cover more of Nvidia’s chips, CEO Jensen Huang said earlier this year that the firm is facing “a lot more competition in China” because of limitations on the technology it can sell there.
Huawei operates computer clusters running on Ascend chips in 19 cities across China, including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen. It also has plans to bring new clusters online in major provincial capitals, including Kunming in southwestern Yunnan, Changsha in central Hunan, Changchun in northeastern Jilin and Jinan in eastern Shandong.