CYAIApr 22, 2025

Trends in AI Supercomputers

HarvardStanford
arXiv:2504.16026v211 citationsh-index: 4
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This provides policymakers with data on AI supercomputer trends like resource needs and global competitiveness, though it is incremental analysis of existing systems.

The authors analyzed 500 AI supercomputers from 2019 to 2025, finding that computational performance doubled every nine months while hardware costs and power needs doubled annually, with the leading 2025 system costing $7B and using 300 MW of power.

Frontier AI development relies on powerful AI supercomputers, yet analysis of these systems is limited. We create a dataset of 500 AI supercomputers from 2019 to 2025 and analyze key trends in performance, power needs, hardware cost, ownership, and global distribution. We find that the computational performance of AI supercomputers has doubled every nine months, while hardware acquisition cost and power needs both doubled every year. The leading system in March 2025, xAI's Colossus, used 200,000 AI chips, had a hardware cost of \$7B, and required 300 MW of power, as much as 250,000 households. As AI supercomputers evolved from tools for science to industrial machines, companies rapidly expanded their share of total AI supercomputer performance, while the share of governments and academia diminished. Globally, the United States accounts for about 75% of total performance in our dataset, with China in second place at 15%. If the observed trends continue, the leading AI supercomputer in 2030 will achieve $2\times10^{22}$ 16-bit FLOP/s, use two million AI chips, have a hardware cost of \$200 billion, and require 9 GW of power. Our analysis provides visibility into the AI supercomputer landscape, allowing policymakers to assess key AI trends like resource needs, ownership, and national competitiveness.

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