Scrutica
GPUs
Supply Chain
Not yet available
Power capacity, hardware inventory, upstream suppliers, and downstream customers for the row owned by China Mobile; any BIS Entity List exposure is walked through the canonical org graph rather than asserted at the facility row.
Capacity, ownership chain, and supply-chain position for China Mobile Intelligent Computing Center — Harbin, including any export-control exposure that surfaces when the BIS Entity List touches a node above the facility in the chain.
As of 2026-05-22
Operator (or owner of record) per the Scrutica facility row.
Ownership chain not yet documented in the available data (PitchBook affiliate graph, FactSet supply graph, SEC filings, LEI registry; as of 2026-05-22). The chain may extend further once additional ingestion runs complete; absence here reflects coverage at this snapshot, not a documented apex.
Description
China Mobile Heilongjiang Company Intelligent Computing Center, sited in Harbin, Heilongjiang Province. Inaugurated September 1, 2024 per Bastille Post + China Daily government portal coverage. Described as "world's largest single-cluster intelligent computing center" (Bastille Post) and "country's largest AI computing cluster based on a domestic ecosystem" (China Daily, state-government portal tier-1). Approximately 18,000 AI acceleration cards; 6.6-6.9 EFLOPS computing power (figures vary slightly across sources). Domestically-sourced chips ("domestic ecosystem" framing in China Daily — implicit reference to non-Nvidia accelerators, likely Huawei Ascend + Hygon DCU per industry context). Inauguration announcement 2024-08-21; operational 2024-09-01. China Mobile 2024 AR press release lists Harbin alongside Hohhot Horinger as the two "mega-scale intelligent computing centers with 10K-level processor capacity" that commenced operation in 2024.
Timeline
Announced
Aug 21, 2024
Operational
Sep 1, 2024
Notes
authority_tier=1: China Daily state-government portal primary inauguration coverage 2024-08-21 + Bastille Post 2024-09 inauguration coverage with 18,000-card / 6.9 EFLOPS specifications + China Mobile 2024 AR press release confirms Harbin + Hohhot as the 2 mega-centers operationalized in 2024. Per-facility MW capacity NOT disclosed; power_capacity_mw NULL. Lat/lng NULL — Harbin city centroid only. total_gpu_count=18000 populated per state-affiliated press disclosure ("18,000 AI acceleration cards"). The "domestic ecosystem" framing is BIS-export-controls-relevant (Huawei Ascend + Hygon DCU likely substitutes for restricted Nvidia chips) — flag for BIS cross-reference analysis pipeline.
Other China Mobile Facilities
China (CN)
Not a Wassenaar participant; operates its own Export Control Law (2020) and Unreliable Entity List; MOFCOM and the Ministry of Commerce administer dual-use catalogues.
Regimes: Chinese Export Control Law (2020); MOFCOM Unreliable Entity List authority
Established via: China Mobile
No flags found across the chain (BIS Entity List, designation-cascade closures, or compute-threshold reporting obligations) as of 2026-05-22. Cascade closures evaluated: 0.
No ownership-change events documented in the available data for any entity in this chain over the last 5 years. Events draw from PitchBook deal records (M&A, buyout, divestiture, asset sale, JV formation); PitchBook coverage is strongest for private US/EU transactions and partial for state-owned-enterprise restructurings or non-Western private deals. Subsequent ingestion runs may add events here.
No documented sovereign or state-linked LP investment touches any entity in this chain. PitchBook LP-disclosure rate is partial; absence of evidence here is not evidence of absence.
The walk for China Mobile Intelligent Computing Center — Harbinstarts at the operator org id (or owner org id when no operator is recorded) and climbs upward through the unified affiliate graph, normalized to trace child-to-parent relationships. At each hop, the highest-authority parent edge wins (priority ordering: SEC EDGAR / 10-K / LEI registry > FactSet Workstation / Revere > Compustat > BIS / Federal Register > PitchBook). Confidence and recency break ties.
The walk terminates on (a) a node with a public-filing-grade ancestor edge — a SEC filer, an LEI-registered listed entity, or a 10-K-disclosed parent — (b) a government entity, (c) a 10-hop limit, or (d) a detected cycle. When termination is not at a public filer or government, the panel labels the chain's end-state as opaque beyond that point. Opacity is reported, never implied.
Per-source confidence (PitchBook): HIGH for Parent / Subsidiary edges; MEDIUM for JV and AFFILIATE edges. Known limitations: (1) shell companies with undisclosed principals terminate the public-record walk; (2) recent transactions reach the panel after PitchBook's weekly refresh; (3) cross-jurisdiction private holding structures may carry intermediate hops that are not in any ingested source. Each row carries an edge-level as of date so freshness is auditable per hop.
Two further caveats are inherent to how the walker and the underlying data compose. The walker selects a single highest-authority parent per hop, so JV or multi-parent ownership structures collapse to one displayed path; alternate parents exist in the ingested sources but are not surfaced on this card. And some PitchBook edges encode parent-of relations against entity-resolved stub IDs whose display name reflects a sub-entity (a business unit, an acquired-then-renamed line) rather than the canonical parent — when a chain reads structurally surprising, the per-row source citation is the authoritative reference, not the chain's narrative shape.
Computed at: 2026-05-22. Walk depth observed: 1 hop. Sources combined: Scrutica facility record + PitchBook affiliate graph + SEC CIK cross-reference + LEI registry + (where applicable) FactSet Revere supply-chain graph + Federal Register designation closures.
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CN