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NVIDIA CEO: Every Country Needs Sovereign AI

Jensen Huang describes transformative potential of sovereign AI at World Governments Summit.
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Every country needs to own the production of their own intelligence, NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang told attendees Monday at the World Governments Summit in Dubai.

Huang, who spoke as part of a fireside chat with the UAE’s Minister of AI, His Excellency Omar Al Olama, described sovereign AI — which emphasizes a country’s ownership over its data and the intelligence it produces — as an enormous opportunity for the world’s leaders.

“It codifies your culture, your society’s intelligence, your common sense, your history – you own your own data,” Huang told Al Olama during their conversation, a highlight of an event attended by more than 4,000 delegates from 150 countries.

“We completely subscribe to that vision,” Al Olama said. “That’s why the UAE is moving aggressively on creating large language models and mobilizing compute.”

Huang’s appearance in the UAE comes as the Gulf State is moving rapidly to transform itself from an energy powerhouse into a global information technology hub.

Dubai is the latest stop for Huang in a global tour that has included meetings with leaders in Canada, France, India, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore and Vietnam over the past six months.

The Middle East is poised to reap significant benefits from AI, with PwC projecting a $320 billion boost to the region’s economy by 2030.

At Monday’s summit, Huang urged leaders not to be “mystified” by AI. AI’s unprecedented ability to take directions from ordinary humans makes it critical for countries to embrace AI, infusing it with local languages and expertise.

In response to Al Olama’s question about how he might approach AI if he were the leader of a developing nation, Huang emphasized the importance of building infrastructure.

“It’s not that costly, it is also not that hard,” Huang said. “The first thing that I would do, of course, is I would codify the language, the data of your culture into your own large language model.”

And as AI and accelerated computing has developed, NVIDIA GPUs have become a platform for one innovation after another.

“NVIDIA GPU is the only platform that’s available to everybody on any platform,” Huang said. “This ubiquity has not only democratized AI but facilitated a wave of innovation that spans from cloud computing to autonomous systems and beyond.

All of this promises to unleash new kinds of innovations that go beyond what’s traditionally been thought of as information technology.

Huang even countered advice offered by many visionaries over the years who urged young people to study computer science in order to compete in the information age. No longer.

“In fact, it’s almost exactly the opposite,” Huang said. “It is our job to create computing technologies that nobody has to program and that the programming language is human: everybody in the world is now a programmer — that is the miracle.”

In a move that further underscores the regional momentum behind AI, Moro Hub, a subsidiary of Digital DEWA, the digital arm of the Dubai Electricity and Water Authority, focused on providing cloud services, cybersecurity and smart city solutions, announced Monday it has agreed to build a green data center with NVIDIA.

In addition to the fireside chat, the summit featured panels on smart mobility, sustainable development and more, showcasing the latest in AI advancements. Later in the evening, Huang and Al Olama took the stage at the “Get Inspired” ecosystem event, organized by the UAE’s AI Office, featuring 280 attendees including developers, startups and others.

Explore generative AI sessions and experiences at NVIDIA GTC, the global conference on AI and accelerated computing, running March 18-21 in San Jose, Calif., and online.

NVIDIA Powers Over 400 of the World’s 500 Fastest Supercomputers

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News Highlights:

  • NVIDIA technology runs 81% of the TOP500 and 90% of the systems new to the list.
  • 26 systems on the TOP500 adopted the NVIDIA Grace CPU, up eight from the previous list.
  • The top eight systems on the Green500 run on NVIDIA GPUs and nine of the top 10 use NVIDIA technologies.
  • No. 1 on the Green500, KAIROS, uses a single NVIDIA Grace Hopper Superchip.
  • 376 of the TOP500 systems are interconnected using NVIDIA networking.

NVIDIA technologies power more than 400 of the world’s 500 fastest supercomputers — 81% of the TOP500 — according to the latest rankings released this week at the ISC High Performance conference in Hamburg, Germany.

That’s a gain of 17 systems from the previous list, with the momentum in new deployments: nearly nine of every 10 systems new to the ranking are built on NVIDIA technologies.

That percentage reflects a deliberate preference for machines built for AI, simulation and science together. And it’s compounding: NVIDIA systems across the TOP500 now deliver more than 2x the AI training and nearly 3x the AI inference throughput of every other platform combined.

GPU and networking adoption each hit new highs, with NVIDIA GPUs accelerating a record 238 systems and NVIDIA networking connecting a record 376 — the vast majority on NVIDIA Quantum InfiniBand, the backbone of large-scale AI and high-performance computing, and the rest on Ethernet. 

The trend behind the numbers is bigger than any one list: Accelerated computing is becoming the foundation for the systems taking on the world’s most demanding work, across AI and science.

Updated twice a year, the TOP500 ranks the world’s fastest supercomputers, while the Green500 list measures how much computing each delivers per watt.

A Full-Stack Footprint

NVIDIA’s reach now spans the full system — GPU, networking and, increasingly, the CPU — with NVIDIA Grace CPU adoption reaching 26 systems, up eight from the previous list, with nearly 2.5 million Grace CPUs shipped.

NVIDIA Grace-based machines sit atop both rankings: JUPITER at No. 5 and Alps at No. 10 on the TOP500, and KAIROS at No. 1 on the Green500.

Each pairs an NVIDIA GPU with the Grace CPU in a single NVIDIA Grace Hopper Superchip, letting the two share memory with minimal overhead — a design built for the memory-intensive demands of modern AI.

The NVIDIA Vera CPU, announced earlier this year, builds on the success of Grace, taking CPU performance and energy efficiency to new levels for the most demanding AI workloads in modern data centers — where agents move from answering basic questions to taking actions, running code, using tools and evaluating results.

Topping the Efficiency List

NVIDIA swept the Green500 ranking of the most energy-efficient supercomputers: The top eight all run on NVIDIA GPUs and nine of the top 10 use NVIDIA technologies. 

Leading the list is KAIROS, an NVIDIA Grace Hopper system at France’s University of Toulouse, at 73.3 gigaflops per watt — with Grace Hopper systems taking the top four spots, across France, Germany and the U.K.

From Exascale Science to the Next Wave

A record 35 NVIDIA AI HPC supercomputers are in development across Europe — equipping more than 3 million researchers with next-generation infrastructure for continental AI, accelerated science and industrial innovation.

Among these systems is JUPITER, Europe’s fastest supercomputer and its first to reach exascale, at the Jülich Supercomputing Centre in Germany.

JUPITER is mapping the human brain at cellular scale, simulating Earth’s climate and advancing the AI behind next-generation 6G networks.

The newest arrivals to the list run on the NVIDIA Blackwell architecture, with B200 and GB200 systems entering the rankings across Asia, Europe and the U.S. — and the first GB200 systems debuting in Japan.

The buildout is global, from a new AI factory in South Africa to national AI systems in Saudi Arabia, Singapore and Vietnam.

It’s the same story up and down the list: the world’s AI buildout is running on NVIDIA.

NAIRR Science Program Reshapes Scientific Research, Powered by NVIDIA AI Infrastructure

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For the past two years, the U.S. National Science Foundation’s National Artificial Intelligence Research Resource (NAIRR) pilot program has driven innovative research across the U.S. for over 700 projects — spanning protein prediction and infectious disease outbreak management. 

NVIDIA contributed to the NAIRR pilot through a cloud-based resource that gives researchers dedicated access to a minimum of four NVIDIA DGX nodes for at least a month. NVIDIA also provided technical support to onboard and assist the researchers throughout their projects. 

With NVIDIA’s AI infrastructure support and DGX reference architecture providing dedicated resources, researchers have collapsed workflow timelines and uncovered groundbreaking technologies that will reshape and advance industries such as healthcare, agriculture and energy. 

The potential for scientific exploration and discovery across the nation through NAIRR is boundless. Learn more about a few NAIRR projects below. 

Physical Simulations With Polymathic AI’s Well Dataset

Simulation-to-real pipelines are becoming increasingly common across industries as a safer, more cost-efficient deployment method. 

Polymathic AI — a coalition of international scientists from Flatiron Institute, Cambridge University and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab — with the help of NVIDIA GPUs and NVIDIA NVLink interconnect technology, is strengthening physical, fluidlike simulations with its large-scale dataset called the “Well.” The dataset will be used to train the largest and most broadly applicable foundation model for fluidlike behavior to date. 

This foundation model, named Walrus, has been made publicly available along with its data, code and pertained weights. 

Polymathic AI’s approach builds on previous work in physics pretraining environments — addressing current limitations in scale and pretraining diversity. The research group also plans to explore scaling laws to help accelerate the development of more powerful foundation models for scientific applications.

University of Michigan’s Fusion Model for Energy Storage

Energy, a foundation of society, requires designing novel and efficient materials for energy storage and conversion.

Researchers at the University of Michigan, led by Professor Venkat Viswanathan in the Department of Aerospace engineering, are developing a model-fusion framework that brings together domain-specific molecular AI and general-purpose large language models. The goal is to help computational scientists more easily explore chemical space, ask chemistry-specific questions in natural language and identify promising materials for next-generation energy technologies. 

The family of molecular foundation models, MIST (the Molecular Insight SMILES Transformers), is designed for discovery and exploration across chemical space. 

MIST models were pretrained on large unlabeled molecular datasets and use a novel tokenizer, Smirk, to better capture nuclear, electronic, geometric, isotopic and stereochemical information from molecular representations. MIST models have been fine-tuned on more than 400 structure-property relationships and can match or exceed state-of-the-art performance across benchmarks spanning electrochemistry, quantum chemistry, physiology and other domains. 

MIST was developed on a 40-GPU NVIDIA DGX cluster the researchers gained as part of a NAIRR allocation and an additional 200,000 NVIDIA GPU hours on ALCF’s Polaris cluster. The team used NVIDIA’s NGC PyTorch container to support reproducible GPU-accelerated development across the different clusters.

Fusing MIST with general-purpose LLMs makes accurate quantum-chemical calculations more broadly accessible and accelerates the design of energy storage and conversion systems needed to enable widespread electrification of transportation, such as in the heavy-duty and aviation sectors.

Boston University’s BEACON AI Pipeline for Infectious Disease Detection 

Infectious diseases can spread rapidly in communities, causing surges in outbreaks. 

Boston University’s Hariri Institute for Computing and the Center on Emerging Infectious Diseases is working to train and evaluate a LLM using NVIDIA accelerated compute, through an AI pipeline to support an outbreak monitoring program called BEACON — Biothreats Emergence, Analysis and Communications Network.  

This LLM is being trained using a large corpus of documents on infectious diseases and epidemic-prone priority pathogens to support the work of field experts and outbreak analysts working on BEACON.

The model will be capable of analyzing online posts of emerging disease outbreaks on a global scale to extract features for downstream categorization and prioritization. BEACON will process signals from a variety of sources — including global disease-tracking platform HealthMap, news and social media feeds, subject-matter experts and individual communications via community boards or social media — to generate concise outbreak reports.  

These comprehensive outbreak analyses can inform clinical practice guidelines for emerging infectious diseases and identify gaps where further data is needed. 

Internationally deployed doctors, government organizations and academic researchers are already using the BEACON model to quickly identify and treat infectious diseases. 

“When you talk to infectious disease experts about what they used to do before we developed this pipeline, it used to take several hours for them to compose a report,” said Ioannis Paschalidis, director of Boston University’s Hariri Institute. “Now, producing a report gets done in roughly two minutes.” 

NAIRR and NVIDIA Across the Nation 

The latest scientific research doesn’t end there. Many other universities — including Harvard, Stanford, Colorado State University and more — are pioneering scientific breakthroughs with the help of NAIRR and NVIDIA. 

With scientists gaining broader access to AI and accelerated computing, innovation for a safer and healthier nation are more tangible than ever. 

Learn more about the NAIRR pilot program and explore how NVIDIA is driving academic research.

NVIDIA Vera CPU Opens the Way for Agentic Scientific AI at Los Alamos National Laboratory

Mission, Vision and Veritas supercomputers with Vera CPUs to advance materials simulation, scientific AI agents and molecular design.
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Mission, Vision and Veritas — new Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) supercomputers to be built with HPE and NVIDIA — are tapping NVIDIA Vera CPUs to accelerate scientific discovery, unlocking agentic AI for science.

The supercomputers will use the HPE Cray Supercomputing GX5000 architecture with the NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform, combining NVIDIA Vera CPUs, NVIDIA Rubin GPUs and NVIDIA Quantum-X800 InfiniBand networking.

Under the planned configuration, Mission will include NVIDIA Vera Rubin GPU nodes and 2,300 standalone NVIDIA Vera CPUs using the HPE Cray Supercomputing GX240 blade. Veritas will feature approximately 1,150 standalone NVIDIA Vera CPUs to complement NVIDIA Vera Rubin nodes. 

Veritas will arrive alongside Mission and Vision and serve the Laboratory Directed Research and Development program, helping accelerate agentic AI for science. The system will test these technologies for use in larger systems being built out at LANL. 

Researchers are adding a new tool for science with AI agents that can form hypotheses, choose tools, launch simulations, analyze outputs and refine the next step. LANL’s public work on URSA, the Universal Research and Scientific Agent — running on Venado and soon Mission and Vision — points in this direction: a modular, feedback-driven AI framework designed to help scientists brainstorm hypotheses, plan experiments, run simulations and analyze results. 

LANL demonstrated that the Vera CPU delivered 7x higher performance on URSA workloads than the CPUs in the Crossroads x86 supercomputer.

Vera CPU for Agents and Simulation

In LANL’s early testing of NVIDIA Vera CPUs on Branson — an open source Monte Carlo heat transfer simulation tool — Vera outperforms the CPUs used in the Crossroads x86 supercomputer by over 3x. 

These results were made possible by Vera, including its custom Olympus core, LPDDR5 memory and fast on-chip fabric. 

A single Vera CPU outperforms a single socket x86-based CPU by more than 3x while providing more than 4x the memory per core and 6x the memory per node. Ultimately, this means faster  scientific results for LANL.

All of the lab’s supercomputers were codesigned by hardware architects, system software developers, domain scientists, computer scientists and applied mathematicians — helping ensure systems are shaped by real scientific workloads, not abstract benchmarks alone. 

Building on Generations of LANL Systems

Mission, expected to be operational in 2027, will be the fifth Advanced Technology System in the National Nuclear Security Administration’s Advanced Simulation and Computing program and will replace Crossroads for classified national security workloads. 

Vision, also expected to be operational in 2027, will serve as a resource for fundamental science, including materials and nuclear science, energy modeling, biomedical research and AI — letting more scientists test methods, train models and explore ideas before moving into higher-consequence work.

The work extends more than a decade of LANL and NVIDIA’s deep collaboration on CPUs, from Grace to Vera, using extreme codesign for LANL simulation workloads.

The three new supercomputers build on Venado, the HPE Cray EX supercomputer installed at Los Alamos in 2024 with NVIDIA GH200 Grace Hopper Superchips and NVIDIA Grace CPU Superchips. 

Learn more about the NVIDIA Vera CPU.