Tech
Trump Says Nvidia’s Most Advanced AI Chips Will Be Reserved for U.S. Companies
U.S. President Donald Trump has announced that Nvidia’s most powerful semiconductors will be reserved exclusively for American artificial intelligence companies, signaling a new phase in the race for global AI dominance.
In an interview with CBS aired on Sunday, Trump said the United States would not permit other nations to access Nvidia’s most advanced Blackwell chips — the latest and most powerful generation designed for AI training and data processing.
“We will not let anybody have them other than the United States,” Trump said, emphasizing that restricting access to these chips was essential to maintaining America’s technological lead in the global AI race.
Nvidia, the California-based semiconductor giant, has become the cornerstone of AI development worldwide, supplying critical chips used by leading tech firms to train large language models (LLMs). The company recently became the world’s most valuable, reaching a $5 trillion (€4.3 trillion) market valuation after surpassing the $4 trillion mark earlier this year.
Trump acknowledged that while Nvidia will continue to sell chips to China, the country will not have access to the firm’s most advanced technology. “If other countries had Nvidia’s top chips, they’d have an equal advantage in the AI race,” he said.
The announcement follows reports that Trump intended to discuss the export of Blackwell chips with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a planned meeting in South Korea, though the conversation reportedly did not take place.
Trump’s position on semiconductor exports has shifted several times during his presidency, alternating between tightening and easing restrictions. His administration had previously approved limited sales of Nvidia’s H20 chips to China despite ongoing concerns about technology transfers.
A national AI strategy unveiled by the Trump administration in July outlined plans to expand America’s global AI influence by exporting technology and standards to nations within what it called “America’s AI alliance.” However, the latest comments mark a departure from that strategy, suggesting a renewed focus on prioritizing domestic access over international partnerships.
Euronews Next contacted the White House to clarify whether new export controls would extend to European partners but received no immediate response.
In June, Nvidia announced plans to deliver more than 3,000 exaflops of computing power from its Blackwell systems to France, Italy, and the United Kingdom. The chips were slated for deployment by France’s Mistral AI, Italy’s Domyn, Dutch firm Nebius, and AI start-up Nscale to help bolster Europe’s digital sovereignty. Telecom companies including Orange, Swisscom, Telefonica, and Telenor were also expected to use Nvidia’s technology for developing “agentic AI” — systems capable of autonomous goal-driven actions.
It remains unclear whether Trump’s latest export policy will affect these European projects, as Nvidia and its partners have yet to comment on potential disruptions.
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