The United States Commerce Department has begun issuing licenses to Nvidia to export its H20 chips to China, a US official told Reuters on Friday, marking a major breakthrough for the AI giant’s access to one of its most important markets.The move follows Washingtonโs decision last month to reverse an April ban on sales of the H20 chip to China. Nvidia had designed the processor specifically to comply with Biden-era AI chip export rules. The restrictions were expected to wipe $8 billion off its July-quarter sales, the company had warned.Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met with US President Donald Trump on Wednesday, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.In July, the company said it was applying for licenses to resume H20 sales and had been assured of speedy approvals. It remains unclear how many licenses have been granted, which Chinese companies can receive the chips, or the total value of approved shipments.Nvidia previously disclosed a $5.5 billion hit from the export curbs but later revised the figure down by $1 billion after reusing some materials. The H20 alone generated $4.6 billion in first-quarter sales, with China accounting for 12.5% of the companyโs overall revenue.The company has denied Chinese claims that the H20 poses national security risks, insisting the chip contains no โbackdoorsโ for remote access. โCybersecurity is critically important to us. NVIDIA does not have โbackdoorsโ in our chips that would give anyone a remote way to access or control them,โ a Nvidia spokesperson earlier said in a statement.CNBC reported that Chinaโs Cyberspace Administration (CAC) has asked Nvidia to โto clarify and submit relevant supporting documentation regarding security risks, including potential vulnerabilities and backdoors, associated with its H20 computing chips sold to China.โThe regulator said Nvidia’s AI chips have been reported to contain serious security flaws and noted that some US lawmakers are pushing for mandatory tracking features on advanced chip exports.Other high-end Nvidia AI chips remain barred from sale to China under longstanding US export controls aimed at slowing Beijing’s AI and defense advancements.Huang has warned that Nvidiaโs industry leadership could be at risk without access to the Chinese market, where domestic rivals like Huawei are rapidly expanding their chip offerings.