Lenovo and NVIDIA have announced a new collaboration to accelerate the deployment of large-scale artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure for enterprise use. The announcement was made at Tech World @ CES 2026 in Las Vegas, where Lenovo introduced the Lenovo AI Cloud Gigafactory with NVIDIA.
The program aims to help AI cloud providers reduce the time it takes to move from concept to production-ready AI services. It combines solutions, services, and manufacturing capabilities, enabling scaling up to millions of GPUs for advanced workloads.
During his keynote address, Lenovo Chairman and CEO Yuanqing Yang said: “In the AI era, value is no longer measured by compute alone, but also by how fast it delivers results. Together, Lenovo and NVIDIA are pushing the boundaries of AI factories to the gigawatt level, simplifying deployment of cloud-scale infrastructure that moves AI intelligence into production faster, with greater efficiency and predictability. With Lenovo’s industry leading Neptune liquid cooling technology, global manufacturing and service capabilities, the Lenovo AI Cloud Gigafactory with NVIDIA sets a new benchmark for scalable AI factory design, enabling the world’s most advanced AI environments to be deployed in record-setting time, fueling innovation at manufacturing speed across industries.”
The initiative addresses growing demands on enterprise AI workloads by supporting applications such as trillion-parameter agentic AI and high-performance computing. The program provides ready-to-use components and expert guidance designed to help providers achieve rapid deployment—measured by a metric called “time to first token” (TTFT), which indicates how quickly investments in computing power result in operational AI systems.
Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA said: “As AI transforms every industry, companies in every country will build or rent AI factories to produce intelligence. Together, NVIDIA and Lenovo are delivering full-stack computing platforms that power agentic AI systems—from the cloud and on-premises data centers to the edge and robotic systems.”
The partnership includes support for advanced hardware such as the NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra architecture through custom cluster designs using accelerated computing platforms from both companies. One example is the new rack-scale system integrating 72 NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra GPUs with 36 Grace CPUs into a single platform.
Additionally, support will extend to newly announced systems like the NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 flagship system for training and inference tasks. These feature next-generation networking technologies such as Spectrum-6 Ethernet switches.
Lenovo states that its Hybrid AI Factory Services will offer full lifecycle support aimed at reducing setup times while providing ongoing differentiation through integrated software libraries like Nemotron models combined with NVIDIA’s software suite.
According to Lenovo’s company profile (https://www.lenovo.com), it is among Fortune Global 500 companies with operations in 180 markets worldwide. The company offers a range of devices including PCs and smartphones alongside infrastructure solutions for enterprises seeking tailored cloud deployments.
Both companies expect their joint efforts will allow clients—including eight out of ten top public cloud providers already powered by Lenovo—to deploy reliable large-scale customized solutions more quickly using trusted performance standards.



