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China’s ‘Stargate’ data plan is a direct challenge to US AI dominance

Ana sayfa / News

As tensions rise in the AI arms race, China is turning rice fields into data centers. The goal: build a nationwide web of computing power that rivals US capabilities and chips away at its global lead.

On an island in the Yangtze River, the city of Wuhu is laying the foundation for what officials are calling the “Stargate of China.” The initiative involves converting farmland into mega data hubs as part of Beijing’s wider push to modernize and coordinate its AI infrastructure. Wuhu’s so-called “Data Island” now hosts centers run by Huawei, China Telecom, China Unicom, and China Mobile. These facilities will funnel AI services to the nearby economic heavyweights—Shanghai, Hangzhou, Nanjing, and Suzhou.

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While the US still holds about 75% of global AI compute power, China commands just 15%. To close that gap, Beijing is restructuring its AI strategy: pushing training workloads to western provinces and keeping inference (real-time AI response generation) near population hubs. This balancing act lets the country make better use of underutilized processors in distant regions without physically relocating hardware.

Wuhu has attracted 15 major data projects, with combined investments hitting $37 billion. Local governments are sweetening the deal—covering up to 30% of AI chip costs, according to industry insiders. But China faces a critical disadvantage: export restrictions from the US have cut off access to NVIDIA’s top-tier processors. Domestic firms like Huawei and Cambricon are trying to fill the void, yet limited production capabilities remain a bottleneck.

Instead of shifting physical servers, China is connecting data centers using advanced networking tech. Telecom giants are stringing together far-flung locations—like Gansu and Inner Mongolia—into what amounts to one giant, virtual supercomputer. Here’s how it works:

Huawei claims its proprietary UB-Mesh networking can double AI training speed by optimizing how data flows across sites.

Still, efficiency remains a hurdle. Smaller, fragmented data centers simply can’t match the raw output of singular, high-density clusters like those in the US. “Using older centers stitched together isn’t ideal,” said Edward Galvin of DC Byte. “It’s a compromise—but one China may have no choice but to make.” For now, China’s Stargate isn’t about outpacing the US—it’s about staying in the game, keeping chips humming, and building a backbone strong enough to support the next phase of AI escalation.

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