Huawei Technologies is capable of producing no more than 200,000 advanced artificial intelligence chips in 2025, a top US exports controls official told lawmakers, warning that though the number is below the company's demand, China is quickly catching up to US capabilities.

Since 2019, a slew of US export rules aimed at curbing China's technological and military advancements have limited access by Huawei and other Chinese firms to high-end US chips and the equipment needed to produce them.
The issue has become a flashpoint in US-China relations.
Facing those restrictions, Huawei aims to ship its Ascend 910C AI chips to Chinese customers as an alternative to those made by the United States' Nvidia, the global leader.
"Our assessment is that Huawei Ascend chip production capacity for 2025 will be at or below 200,000 and we project that most or all of that will be delivered to companies within China," Jeffrey Kessler, Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security at the Commerce Department, told a congressional hearing.
Kessler said that the US should not take comfort in the figure.
"China is investing huge amounts to increase its AI chip production, as well as the capabilities of the chips that it produces. So, it's critical for us not to have a false sense of security, to understand that China is catching up quickly," he told the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs South and Central Asia subcommittee.
White House AI Czar David Sacks said this week that China was only three-to-six months behind the US in AI.
The White House later said he was referring to China's AI models, adding that Chinese AI chips are one to two years behind their US counterparts.
Huawei's CEO Ren Zhengfei told Chinese state media that the company's chips were a generation behind those of US competitors, but that it invests more than US$25 billion ($38.3 billion) annually to improve performance.
Nvidia's AI chips are more powerful than Huawei's but Washington's export controls on its most sophisticated chips have caused it to lose market share.
The US and China reached a tentative trade truce at talks in London this week after a previous agreement faltered over China's continued curbs on minerals exports.
That prompted the Trump administration to apply additional export controls on shipments of semiconductor design software, jet engines for Chinese-made planes and other goods.
Democratic Representative Greg Meeks expressed concern that the Trump administration had conflated US exports controls with broader discussions on trade.
"What I will say is export controls have been strong and I'm confident that they will remain strong," Kessler said.
Kessler said he was not planning any immediate new restrictions on US semiconductors sold to China, but that the Commerce Department will "remain active in this space."
"It's a constantly evolving landscape, and we need to make sure that our controls remain effective," he said.