US-China Chip War Timeline: From Huawei to Nvidia
As Nvidia says it will resume sales of a less powerful AI semiconductor model to China, here is a run-down of the microchip conflict

The United States has in recent years sought to curb exports of cutting-edge semiconductors to China, with Nvidia and other US chip companies lobbying against its tough restrictions.
As Nvidia says it will resume sales of a less powerful AI semiconductor model to China, here is a run-down of the microchip conflict:
The Chips and Science Act includes around $52 billion to promote the production of microchips, the tiny components that power almost all modern machinery.
The rules, which also toughen requirements on the sale of semiconductor equipment, aim to limit Beijing"s access to state-of-the-art chips with military applications.
China says the United States is attempting to "maliciously block and suppress Chinese businesses".
Many of them have close ties to China"s defence sector, with some linked to efforts to develop hypersonic and ballistic missile systems.
As the world discovers the powers of AI, the release by China-owned Huawei of a new smartphone featuring a powerful home-grown advanced chip also sparks US alarm.
Attention has so far been focused on Nvidia"s industry-leading H100 chip, but the export curbs are widened to other, lower-performing semiconductors made by Nvidia and its peers.
One of them requires authorisations for exports, re-exports and in-country transfers—a bid to avert any circumvention of chip supply to China from other nations.
There are some exceptions for countries considered friendly to the United States, but most face a cap on imports of advanced chips.
"The US leads the world in AI now—both AI development and AI chip design—and it"s critical that we keep it that way," Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo says.
The new rules will take effect in 120 days—giving Trump"s incoming administration time to potentially make changes.
But the tech giant says it has been told by Washington that it must obtain licences to ship the H20s to China because of concerns they may be used in supercomputers there.
Some US lawmakers feared the cap would have incentivised countries to go to China for AI chips, spurring the superpower"s evolution into a tech superpower.
As an alternative, the US Commerce Department reminds AI actors that using Huawei Ascend, the Chinese tech giant"s most advanced chip, violates US export controls— something Beijing later slams as "bullying".
CEO Jensen Huang is expected to attend a major supply chain gathering in Beijing—his third trip to China this year, Chinese state media says.
First Published: Jul 16, 2025, 15:56
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