The announcement reinforces Taiwan’s central role in the global AI supply chain. The island is home to TSMC, the world’s leading contract chipmaker and the manufacturer behind many of Nvidia’s most advanced processors.
As the global race for artificial intelligence dominance accelerates, Nvidia has delivered one of the strongest signals yet about where the future of the industry will be built. Speaking in Taipei this week, chief executive Jensen Huang declared that the company plans to spend as much as US$150 billion annually in Taiwan, describing the island as the “epicentre” of the AI revolution. The announcement marks a dramatic escalation in Nvidia’s long-term commitment to the world’s most important semiconductor hub and underlines Taiwan’s growing strategic importance in the global technology economy.
Huang’s remarks came during a launch event for Nvidia’s planned Taiwan headquarters, a major development that is expected to become operational by 2030. The investment figure is especially striking considering that only a few years ago Nvidia was spending between US$10 billion and US$15 billion annually in Taiwan. According to Huang, that number has already climbed to around US$100 billion and is now set to rise even further as demand for advanced AI infrastructure explodes worldwide.
The announcement reinforces Taiwan’s central role in the global AI supply chain. The island is home to TSMC, the world’s leading contract chipmaker and the manufacturer behind many of Nvidia’s most advanced processors. Taiwan also hosts major manufacturing partners including Foxconn, Wistron and Quanta Computer, all of which play critical roles in assembling AI servers, packaging semiconductors and scaling next-generation computing systems.
For Nvidia, the strategy goes far beyond supply chain efficiency. The company is positioning itself at the heart of what Huang has repeatedly called the largest technological infrastructure build-out in modern history. AI systems are now driving unprecedented investment in data centres, cloud computing, robotics and autonomous systems, and Nvidia’s chips remain the backbone of that transformation. The company recently reported exceptionally strong financial results as global demand for AI processors continued to surge, particularly from hyperscale cloud providers and enterprise customers building advanced generative AI platforms.
Taiwan’s economy has already been transformed by the AI boom. Exports linked to semiconductor manufacturing and AI hardware have strengthened economic growth across the island, turning Taiwan into one of the most strategically significant technology markets in the world. Huang’s declaration that “Taiwan is booming” reflects growing confidence among global investors that the island will remain indispensable to AI development for decades to come.
The timing of Nvidia’s expansion is equally significant. Competition in the AI semiconductor market is intensifying rapidly, with rivals such as AMD also announcing substantial investments in Taiwan’s AI ecosystem. AMD recently confirmed plans to invest more than US$10 billion in Taiwanese manufacturing and advanced chip assembly capabilities, signalling that the island has become the focal point of the next phase of AI industrial growth.
Yet the scale of Nvidia’s commitment also highlights the geopolitical risks surrounding Taiwan. As tensions between China and Taiwan remain closely watched by global markets, major technology firms are effectively placing enormous strategic bets on the island’s long-term stability. Nvidia’s decision to deepen its presence despite regional uncertainty demonstrates the extent to which advanced AI production is now inseparable from Taiwan’s semiconductor ecosystem.
Huang’s personal connection to Taiwan has added another dimension to the company’s growing relationship with the island. Born in Taiwan before emigrating to the United States as a child, the Nvidia chief executive has become something of a celebrity figure there, with his appearances drawing enormous public and media attention. During the Taipei event, Huang emphasised not only Taiwan’s engineering capabilities but also the deep network of partnerships that has enabled Nvidia’s meteoric rise during the AI era.