Baidu is stepping deeper into China’s AI hardware race, turning its Kunlunxin line into a homegrown answer to Nvidia’s restricted GPUs. The search giant’s push into silicon is fast becoming central to Beijing’s broader effort for domestic computing power.
Analysts say Baidu’s chip arm is poised for rapid expansion as Chinese tech firms face tightening supply and rising demand for AI infrastructure, CNBC reported.
Filling the Nvidia void
Baidu’s Kunlunxin unit is moving quickly to meet unmet demand. Its processors now run parts of Baidu’s own data centers. They are being supplied to telecom partners, including vendors to China Mobile, a sign that the company is becoming a go-to domestic source of AI compute.
Forecasts suggest Kunlunxin’s sales could reach 8 billion yuan (around $1.1 billion) by 2026, with Macquarie valuing the unit near $28 billion, proving how China’s AI crunch is quickly turning into Baidu’s advantage.
Moving from prototype to production
Baidu is now translating its chip ambitions into hardware ready for deployment. Its Kunlunxin division has mapped out a new generation of AI processors, built to handle the heaviest computing loads behind large language models, cloud platforms, and telecom networks.
The company uses a mix of its own chips and remaining Nvidia units to power its flagship AI model ERNIE, while also selling Kunlun processors to external clients building data centers.
Deutsche Bank analysts have listed Kunlunxin among China’s top high-performance chip makers, noting that Baidu’s designs are proving practical for large-scale AI workloads.
While Huawei, Alibaba, and Tencent continue to refine their chips, Baidu has already put hardware in the field, a rare milestone in China’s still-developing AI supply chain.
Baidu builds the backbone of China’s AI stack
Baidu’s chip and software operations are now tightly linked, forming the foundation of a full-stack AI ecosystem that extends from hardware to applications. Kunlun processors developed by its Kunlunxin unit drive the company’s ERNIE 5.0 model, which underpins products from Baidu Cloud to Apollo’s autonomous driving systems.
This integration allows Baidu to train, deploy, and scale large models on its own infrastructure. Each new generation of Kunlun chips feeds Baidu’s cloud and AI services, strengthening the country’s ability to advance AI development.
Its strategy focuses on continuity and control, keeping China’s AI momentum from being dictated by foreign access.
The finish line keeps moving
Baidu’s rise in chip design shows more than one company’s progress; it’s a turning point in how China competes in advanced computing. Each performance gain helps narrow the gap with global leaders and gives Chinese developers the hardware needed to train larger, faster models at home.
What began as a workaround to supply limits is becoming a foundation for growth. If Kunlunxin can keep pace with its roadmap, it could help China secure the computing power that decides who dominates the next phase of the AI race.
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