Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

South Korea Gains 260 000-Chip Boost For AI Drive


(MENAFN- The Arabian Post)

South Korean industry and government have secured a major hardware boost as Nvidia will deliver more than 260,000 of its flagship“Blackwell” AI chips to the Republic of Korea in a partnership spanning the public sector and major corporations. The deal, announced during the Asia‐Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit in Gyeongju on 31 October, positions South Korea as a rising artificial-intelligence hub and reflects Nvidia's pivot amid shifting global semiconductor geopolitics.

The agreement covers deployments across multiple sectors: the government will obtain roughly 50,000 of Nvidia's GPUs for its National AI Computing Centre; top chip-maker Samsung Electronics and conglomerate SK Group are each set to install about 50,000 units; automaker Hyundai Motor Group another 50,000; and internet-giant Naver Corporation around 60,000.

Nvidia's chief executive, Jensen Huang, described the arrangement as an opportunity to“produce intelligence as a new export” for South Korea-drawing on its track record in electronics, ships and cars. He met President Lee Jae Myung and leading industrial executives during APEC's leader-week, underpinning the deal's strategic importance.

For South Korea the timing is critical. The country's ambition to become one of the world's top three AI powerhouses is tied to this surge in computing capacity. Officials estimate that the new GPU stock will raise South Korea's installed AI-chip inventory from roughly 65,000 to over 300,000 units-more than a four-fold increase.

The motive spans multiple strands. Domestically, the government has signalled its intent through a budget push to triple AI-related spending to 10.1 trillion won in the 2026 fiscal year, with AI infrastructure now a key focus alongside semiconductors, autos and ship-building. Meanwhile, on the global stage, the transaction reflects Nvidia's response to US export restrictions targeting China: by deepening partnerships with allied economies, Nvidia hedges market access and secures demand beyond geopolitical risk zones.

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Industry commentators note the strategic value for South Korea's private sector. Samsung's aim to build an AI-factory on the back of these chips and Hyundai's plan to apply them in autonomous driving and smart factories indicate a broad industrial integration of AI hardware. SK Group's creation of an industrial-AI cloud, together with Naver's scaling of its model-training infrastructure, further illustrate the ecosystem approach.

However, risks remain. The logistics of deploying such volumes of high-performance chips across multiple sectors present challenges in cooling, power supply and skilled workforce capabilities. Moreover, the influx of foreign hardware raises questions about long-term sovereignty of critical AI infrastructure-South Korea may become reliant on external chip providers even as it strives to build home-grown strength. Some analysts caution that building capacity alone does not always translate into global leadership in AI.

Another layer of uncertainty stems from the export environment. US policy is tightening its grip on shipments of Nvidia's most advanced chips to China and other countries. While the South Korean deal has been approved, shifts in global regulation or export licences could affect timelines or chip-variants supplied.

For the key players in South Korea the stakes are substantial. Samsung and SK are leveraging this infusion to advance semiconductor development and edge-computing systems. Hyundai is tackling next-generation vehicle autonomy. Naver and Kakao increasingly rely on large-scale model training-now anchored to the new hardware. At a national level, the government aims to unlock innovation, jobs and exports through“sovereign AI” infrastructure under domestic control.

In global context, South Korea's move places it firmly within the push by middle powers to stake out a significant role in the AI value chain, not merely as chip supplier but as a platform developer and services export economy. For Nvidia it reinforces its global reach and market dominance at a time when alternatives seek to challenge its position. The magnitude of the chip deployment and its industrial-strategic alignment make this one of the most consequential AI-hardware partnerships of the year.

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The Arabian Post

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