Nvidia’s Scaled-Down RTX Pro 6000 May Fuel China’s AI Growth Despite U.S. Export Curbs
In response to tightened U.S. export restrictions targeting advanced AI chips, Nvidia is preparing a special edition of its RTX Pro 6000 GPU for the Chinese market, according to a TrendForce report. The modified GPU replaces high-bandwidth memory (HBM) with GDDR7 to meet the April 2025 regulatory thresholds that limit memory bandwidth and interconnect performance. While this limits peak capabilities, the chip remains powerful enough for meaningful AI infrastructure development.
TrendForce estimates the downgraded RTX Pro 6000 will deliver performance between Nvidia’s L40S and L20 China Edition—still suitable for complex AI workloads, especially if priced competitively. This makes it an attractive alternative for Chinese cloud service providers (CSPs), which are expected to adopt a horizontal scaling strategy—deploying more nodes to offset the reduced per-chip performance.
Key highlights:
- The chip complies with U.S. rules, but remains highly capable in parallelized AI environments.
- Chinese CSPs are likely to prioritize volume deployments, accepting higher power consumption and infrastructure costs.
- The strategy hinges on pricing and aggregate performance rather than top-tier specs.
This workaround could delay the shift to domestic AI chips from vendors like Huawei and Cambricon, who are racing to fill the gap left by limited access to Nvidia’s top products. However, if Nvidia’s modified GPU underdelivers, it could accelerate China’s push toward homegrown AI hardware solutions.
While not the most efficient setup, the aggregate compute power of these GPUs may still serve China’s AI ambitions effectively. Nvidia’s move reflects a broader challenge in AI geopolitics: navigating the thin line between compliance and capability. The RTX Pro 6000’s success—or failure—could shape the balance of AI chip development and market control in the region.
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