China Telecom claims it has built the country’s first supercomputer constructed entirely with Chinese-made components and technology (viaITHome). Based in Wuhan, the Central Intelligent Computing Center supercomputer is reportedly built for AI and can train large language models (LLM) with trillions of parameters. Although China has built supercomputers with domestic hardware and software before, going entirely domestic is a new milestone for the country’s tech industry.

Exact details on the Central Intelligent Computing Center are scarce. What’s clear so far: The supercomputer is purportedly made with only Chinese parts; it can train AI models with trillions of parameters; and it uses liquid cooling. It’s unclear exactly how much performance the supercomputer has. A five-exaflop figure is mentioned in ITHome’s report, but to our eyes it seems that the publication was talking about the total computational power of China Telecom’s supercomputers, and not just this one.

Supercomputer rendering

We probably can’t expect official performance benchmarks any time soon either, as China is neglecting to submit its supercomputers to TOP500, the organization that tracks the 500 fastest supercomputers in the world. This caginess is apparently down tofears about getting too much attention and inviting even more U.S. sanctions.

It’s hard to guess what might be inside this supercomputer, given the lack of details. On the CPU side of things, it may useZhaoxin’s KaiSheng KH-40000 server CPUs, which arenow available in domestically-made servers. There are also other candidates though, likeLoongson’s 32-core 3D5000andPhytium’s 64-core Feiteng Tengyun S2500. All three chips differ greatly in respect to architecture, with Zhaoxin using x86 like Intel and AMD. Loongson uses a derivative of MIPS, and Phytium runs Arm’s architecture.

Matthew Connatser

Similarly, there are plenty of options for Chinese-made GPUs, with possibilities ranging from Moore Threads, Loongson, and Biren. Of the three companies, Moore Threads is the most recent to launch a new GPU in the form of itsMTT S4000, which is already planned to see use in the KUAE Intelligent Computing Center. Loongson’s LG200 arrived about two weeks before the S4000, thoughits claimed performance would make for a very slow supercomputer. Biren’s BR100 would be a heavyweight champion, but it’s unclear if it ever returned to production anywhere afterTSMC stopped making it due to U.S. sanctions.

Regardless of the actual hardware inside China Telecom’s new supercomputer, that it is reportedly made from top to bottom with Chinese hardware is the most important part. Relying solely on Chinese technology likely means the Central Intelligent Computing Center is disadvantaged in some or many areas. But technological independence is a key goal for China, even if it means swapping out cutting-edge Western hardware for slower but natively-made components. U.S. sanctions won’t have much of an impact if China can manage to do everything itself.

Get Tom’s Hardware’s best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.

Matthew Connatser is a freelancing writer for Tom’s Hardware US. He writes articles about CPUs, GPUs, SSDs, and computers in general.