China has not yet received any Nvidia H200 chips, US official says

China has not yet received any Nvidia H200 chips, US official says


For now, shipments of the chips remain stalled over guardrails built into the process

Published Wed, Feb 25, 2026 · 07:40 AM

[WASHINGTON] None of Nvidia’s second-most advanced artificial intelligence (AI) chips, known as the H200, have been sold yet to Chinese customers, a US Commerce Department official said on Tuesday (Feb 24).

“My understanding is that none so far,” David Peters, the assistant secretary for export enforcement, said at a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing when asked about the prized semiconductors.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington and Nvidia did not immediately respond to requests for comment. US President Donald Trump’s administration last month gave a formal green light to China-bound sales of Nvidia’s H200 chips with conditions, drawing fire from US lawmakers and former officials of both parties.

The administration, led by White House AI czar David Sacks, has said shipping advanced AI chips to China discourages Chinese competitors, such as heavily sanctioned Huawei, from redoubling efforts to catch up with the most advanced chip designs from Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices.

But China hawks fear the chips could easily be diverted from commercial uses to help supercharge China’s military and threaten US dominance in AI. For now, shipments of the chips remain stalled over guardrails built into the process.

Peters was also asked by Republican US Representative Bill Huizenga about chip smuggling into China. Huizenga referenced a Reuters report that Chinese AI startup DeepSeek used Nvidia’s most advanced chip to train its latest AI model, likely in violation of US export controls.

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Nvidia’s announcement also comes as Meta is developing its own AI chips and is in discussions with Google about using that company’s TPUs for AI work.

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“Yes, there is chip smuggling, it is going on,” said Peters. “We are actively addressing this problem. It is among our top enforcement priorities.” REUTERS

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Liam Redmond

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