HUAWEI Technologies Co Ltd unveiled a high-performance chip for servers on Monday as part of its broader push to expand presence in the semiconductor sector.

The move also marks that Huawei has joined players including Qualcomm Inc to build server chips based on the ARM architecture for data centres, a booming market dominated by Intel’s x86-based processors.

Huawei’s ARM-based central processing unit, called Kunpeng 920, is designed to better meet the exponentially growing demand for bigger computing capabilities while slashing power consumption.

Huawei chief strategy marketing officer Xu Wenwei said no single architecture can meet all computing demands and that the company aims to move toward a more diversified computing power world.

“Kunpeng 920 is arguably the world’s best high-performance ARM-based CPU,” Xu said. “From this moment on, the saying that ARM design can’t offer strong computing capabilities becomes invalid.”

According to the company, the CPU will not be sold as a standalone product. Instead, Huawei unveiled a string of TaiShan servers powered by the CPU on Monday. These servers can be used for big data, distributed storage, and ARM-native applications.

Reducing energy costs

Based on ARM architecture, a design commonly used in smartphones and tablets, Kunpeng 920’s power efficiency is 30 per cent better than that offered by industry counterparts, which can greatly help reduce energy costs, Huawei said.

Power consumption accounts for around 30 to 50 per cent of IT costs, Li Guanyu, deputy head of the informatisation and software service department at the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, said in a public forum last year.

“As demand for real-time data processing capabilities surges in the future, the global industry desires high-efficiency, low-energy and low-cost servers,” Li said.

In 2017, the market volume of the global cloud computing industry reached around $260 billion and that figure will exceed $410 billion next year, highlighting the huge potential of the industry. The Chinese market is expected to grow at a compound annual rate of 30 per cent, according to market research company Gartner Inc.

The move is part of Huawei’s broader semiconductor ambitions. In October, the Shenzhen-based company unveiled a range of artificial intelligence chips to power its products and services. As the world’s second largest smartphone vendor, it also has long developed Kirin chips to drive high-end handsets. CHINA DAILY/ANN