China Computing Power Platform (Guizhou) Goes Live and Connects to National Platform
2026-06-25 16:27
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en.Wedoany.com Reported - On June 23, the China Computing Power Platform (Guizhou) was officially completed and launched, successfully connecting to the China Computing Power Platform. Guizhou has become one of the first provinces in the country to connect to the China Computing Power Platform in 2026. The platform will provide basic support for monitoring computing power resources, data collection, standard reporting, and coordinated scheduling within the province, promoting the integration of Guizhou's computing power resources into the national unified monitoring system.

The construction of the China Computing Power Platform (Guizhou) was initiated by the Guizhou Provincial Communications Administration. In March of this year, Guizhou began building the provincial sub-platform in accordance with the deployment requirements of China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology on comprehensively carrying out computing power situational awareness monitoring. After phased construction, the platform has achieved direct connection with the proprietary systems of key data centers, including basic telecommunications enterprises in the province and China's Huawei Cloud, enabling automated collection and standardized reporting of computing power data.

The key point of this launch is not just the addition of a local platform, but the integration of computing power resources scattered among operators, cloud service providers, and key data centers within Guizhou Province into a unified monitoring framework. Previously, data on racks, servers, computing power types, utilization rates, and energy consumption from different data centers were dispersed across their respective systems, making it difficult to form a unified provincial view. With the completion of the Guizhou sub-platform, computing power scale, resource distribution, operational status, and reported data can be more easily aggregated, compared, and continuously updated.

Guizhou is an important computing power hub node in China's "East Data West Computing" project. In recent years, leveraging its advantages in electricity, climate, networks, and data center clusters, Guizhou has continuously undertaken cloud computing, artificial intelligence training, data storage, and industry digitalization-related businesses, forming a strong capacity for aggregating intelligent computing resources. After the China Computing Power Platform (Guizhou) connects to the national platform, the province's computing power resources will be more clearly incorporated into the national computing power resource map, providing a data foundation for cross-regional resource coordination, supply-demand matching, and computing power scheduling.

For the computing power industry, understanding the baseline data is a prerequisite for subsequent optimal allocation. Computing power resources are not just about the number of servers; they also include multiple indicators such as general computing power, intelligent computing power, storage resources, network capabilities, green electricity matching, data center hosting capacity, and actual availability. Through automated collection and standardized reporting, the Guizhou sub-platform can reduce the lag and measurement discrepancies caused by manual statistics, shifting computing power resource management from static reports to dynamic monitoring.

After its launch, the platform will support the implementation of a "unified national computing power resource ledger" in Guizhou. This "unified ledger" corresponds to a centralized understanding of the total amount, structure, distribution, and operational status of computing power resources. For government management departments, it enables a more accurate assessment of local computing power supply capacity and resource utilization; for industrial enterprises, it will also help promote the release of computing power resources, supply-demand linkage, and the implementation of applications in key industries in the future.

With the growth of artificial intelligence, large model training, industrial simulation, and data-intensive businesses, computing power construction across various regions is shifting from single-point data center expansion to systematic coordination. The completion and launch of the China Computing Power Platform (Guizhou) and its connection to the China Computing Power Platform signify that Guizhou's computing power infrastructure has entered a more standardized phase of monitoring and management. Subsequent progress will still require attention to the scope of data center connections within the province, the granularity of computing power data reporting, cross-regional scheduling capabilities, and the platform's actual effectiveness in the digital economy and industrial applications.

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