- NVIDIA confirms that it will completely manufacture its AI supercomputers in the United States
- Arizona and Texas to chip and supercomputer production facilities
- The impulse backed by Trump for technology on land promotes billions in a new investment
Nvidia has announced that it will manufacture its IA supercomputers completely in the United States.
The company revealed plans to produce an AI infrastructure worth $ 500 billion in the US.
More than one million square feet of new manufacturing space are being developed to support this expansion.
The Trump effect?
The Blackwell AI Chips production in Nvidia has begun at the TSMC facilities in Phoenix. In Texas, Foxconn and Wistron will manage the manufacture of supercomputers in Houston and Dallas, and mass production is expected to increase in 12 to 15 months.
Nvidia is also working with Amkor and Spil in Arizona to pack and try her chips. Together, these facilities form a new supply chain based completely on the US, something that the company has never done before. Will this make a big difference? Probably not.
According to the White House, this movement is part of a broader trend driven by efforts to return the manufacture of key technology to the US soil.
“It is the Trump effect on action,” said a statement from the White House. “President Donald J. Trump has made chips based in the United States manufacture a priority as part of his implacable search for an American manufacturing rebirth, and is paying off, with billions of dollars in new investments insured only in the technological sector.”
At the beginning of 2025, President Trump announced a private investment of $ 500 billion in the infrastructure of OPENAI, Oracle and SoftBank, called Stargate.
Apple also announced an investment of $ 500 billion, while TSMC committed $ 100 billion for the manufacture of national chipas. The White House said that the breach of these industries supports US workers, strengthens the economy and improves national security.
“The world’s infrastructure engines are being built in the United States for the first time,” said the CEO of Nvidia, Jensen Huang.
“Adding US manufacturing helps us better meet the incredible and growing demand for AI and supercomputer chips, strengthens our supply chain and increases our resistance.”