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China beefs up computing power by 25% as AI race drives demand

The world’s second-largest economy is on track to meet a 2025 target set last year but still trails the US in total computing muscle

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China’s computing power grew 25 per cent year on year in the first half of 2024. Image: Shutterstock
Coco Fengin Guangdong

Total computing power in China, a critical infrastructure element for processing data and performing digital tasks, grew 25 per cent in the first half of the year, driven by the needs of artificial intelligence (AI) and other technologies.

As of June, computing capacity in the country reached 246 EFLOPS, or 246 quintillion floating-point operations per second, according to a report published on Saturday at the annual China Computational Power Conference in Zhengzhou, the capital of central Henan province. One quintillion is 1 followed by 18 zeros and is equivalent to a billion billions.

This represents a nearly 25 per cent growth from 197 EFLOPS a year before, according to data from last year’s conference, held in Yinchuan of Ningxia Hui autonomous region. If this pace continues, the world’s second-largest economy is on track to meet a target set last year to achieve total computing power of 300 EFLOPS by 2025.

Among the overall resources, the growth of intelligent computing power used in AI-related tasks surged 65 per cent, the 2024 report said, without revealing the exact size.

China remains the second-strongest computing powerhouse after the United States. The report, compiled by state-backed China Academy of Information and Communications Technology (CAICT), showed that the US accounted for 32 per cent of the world’s total computing power of 910 EFLOPS as of the end of last year, higher than China’s 26 per cent. The report counts both government and commercial facilities.

Although the report did not provide updated data on geographical breakdown, Zhao Zhiguo, chief engineer at the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, said at the event that China “is among the world’s best”, according to state-backed newspaper Science and Technology Daily.

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