NVIDIA has confirmed plans to align with recent U.S. tariff trends by moving production of its AI supercomputers, including the Blackwell lineup, to domestic facilities.
In partnership with key manufacturers, the company will help establish over one million square feet of production capacity across Arizona and Texas. This strategic expansion is designed to meet growing market demand and strengthen supply chain resilience, serving as a direct response to the shifting U.S. trade policies.
Initiated under the Trump administration, a wave of tariffs targeting imported goods such as electronics and automotive components has pushed many companies to reassess their global supply chains and explore U.S.-based manufacturing as a way to offset rising import costs.
Meanwhile, NVIDIA is already utilizing TSMC’s Phoenix, Arizona, facility for Blackwell chip production but they also plan to expand further by building AI supercomputer manufacturing plants in Houston with Foxconn and in Dallas with Wistron, with production expected to scale up within the next 12 to 15 months.
Team Green’s initiative is set to play a major role in advancing U.S. technological infrastructure as the company aims to generate up to $500 billion worth of AI infrastructure domestically over the next four years, potentially creating hundreds of thousands of jobs and delivering long-term economic benefits.