Local Chinese governments have begun issuing attractive power incentives and subsidies to Chinese tech companies, including ByteDance, Alibaba, and Tencent, according to a new report. Designed to cut energy bills for affected companies, the subsidies are an effort to further curtail the use of foreign chips, such as Nvidia's powerful AI-capable hardware. The incentives are also intended to bolster the local production of Chinese chips and AI processors.
The past year has seen the U.S. and China tussle repeatedly over access to the latest hardware, namely, Nvidia GPUs. On-again, off-again tariffs, trade export blocks, and threats to restrict access to rare earth minerals have ultimately led to China pushing to accelerate the development of its own AI hardware, like GPUs and ASICs for inference and, aspirationally, AI training. To encourage their use, the country has effectively blocked Chinese tech companies from using Nvidia GPUs and pushed them towards domestic alternatives instead.
The only problem is, Nvidia GPUs are at the top of the pile for a reason: they're incredibly fast, and far more efficient than the alternatives from the likes of Huawei and Cambrion. Specifically, Nvidia's GPUs are so far ahead in terms of per-watt efficiency that Chinese alternatives are generations behind, perhaps due to export restrictions on ASML's latest EUV lithography tools, which China doesn't have access to. This means that chips developed natively in the region will lag behind the rest of the world. Despite these limitations, companies such as Huawei continue to make efforts to compete with Nvidia.
Companies like Huawei are developing high-performance chips, clustering them together and pumping them full of additional power, but that makes them less efficient, in turn leading to rapidly rising energy costs.
These rising energy costs have led to grumbling in the Chinese tech industry, so Chinese government officials are looking to sweeten the deal with proposed energy subsidies. Regions like Gansu, Guizhou, and Inner Mongolia, where data centers are heavily concentrated, have begun offering large energy subsidies, cutting bills by as much as 50% in some cases.
The catch is that data centers that use GPUs and chips from foreign manufacturers, like Nvidia, are exempt from the incentives. This plan has the dual benefit for local governments of meeting central party demands, while also helping attract data center production to their region, as local governments compete for contracts.
(Image credit: Huawei)
These subsidies are funded by the $50 billion Big Fund III, which China set up to compete with the U.S., in order to bolster its chip design and fabrication industry, thereby bolstering the country's AI efforts. China is ultimately expected to spend close to $100 billion in government investment on accelerating the development of these domestic industries this year.
Across the Pacific, American companies like OpenAI, Nvidia, Oracle, and CoreWeave are all collectively investing hundreds of billions of dollars in AI infrastructure, building out enormous data centers and circularly buying each other's services, hardware, and software. Chinese tech companies are looking to compete, although Goldman Sachs has predicted that those companies will "only" invest around $70 billion in data centers in 2026.
Despite greater investment in the U.S., it might also be energy which proves the bottleneck. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said that the company is sitting on unused GPUs and AI chips that it can't use because it doesn't have the energy to run them. Elon Musk's xAI has been buying up gas turbines by the thousands and is even trying to import a power station. One thing is clear: massive AI data center buildouts are causing a squeeze in energy supplies across the board. Small, modular nuclear reactors could be one way around the issue, but it's far from a simple, quick solution.
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