NVIDIA prepares B30A Blackwell Artificial Intelligence accelerator for China

NVIDIA has designed a China-specific single-die B30A accelerator derived from the B300 Blackwell Ultra to meet export restrictions while retaining HBM and NVLink. The B30A is expected to halve the dual-die B300´s peak performance across precisions and target domestic Artificial Intelligence labs.

NVIDIA has created a China-specific variant of its Blackwell Ultra accelerator called the B30A, according to a Reuters report cited in the article. The B30A uses the same base die as the dual-die B300 but embeds a single die on the package to comply with export restrictions. This follows NVIDIA´s earlier export-modified H20 accelerator, which recently received an export license. The article notes that the U.S. administration granted NVIDIA access to an export license that enables these China-targeted products.

Technical expectations for the B30A are drawn directly from the Blackwell Ultra´s dual-die numbers. The B300 in dual-die configuration delivers 15 petaFLOPS at FP4, 7.5 petaFLOPS at FP6/FP8, 3.75 petaFLOPS at FP16/BF16, and 1.88 petaFLOPS at TF32. By embedding a single die, the B30A is expected to halve those figures across the listed precisions. The article emphasizes that NVIDIA will retain mission-critical features such as high-bandwidth memory (HBM) and NVLink on the B30A, which support both training and inference workloads despite the reduced die count.

The report frames the B30A as a response to Chinese Artificial Intelligence labs seeking higher performance than previous export-modified options. The article suggests these chips may be sufficient to compete with current Chinese-designed AI accelerators when combined with NVIDIA´s software stack and performance profile. By offering a single-die variant that preserves key interconnect and memory features while meeting export constraints, NVIDIA is again positioned to supply high-performance accelerators to the Chinese market for domestic needs and laboratory deployments.

72

Impact Score

Europe weighs technology sovereignty push amid internal debate

Europe is preparing a new policy push to reduce reliance on major technology platforms, but internal disagreements are shaping the scope and pace of the effort. The Artificial Intelligence Development Act is due to be unveiled on June 3 after repeated delays.

EU Artificial Intelligence Act omnibus deal delays high-risk rules

A provisional EU agreement would push back key high-risk Artificial Intelligence Act deadlines while keeping major transparency duties on track for 2 August 2026. The deal also adds a new ban on non-consensual intimate imagery and child sexual abuse material generated by Artificial Intelligence systems.

UK and EU Artificial Intelligence regulatory outlook for May 2026

The UK is moving ahead with targeted Artificial Intelligence measures in policing, online safety, cyber security and copyright policy, while the EU is refining how the EU Artificial Intelligence Act will apply in practice. Consultations, new offences and implementation deadlines are shaping the next phase of compliance on both sides.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.