The US Chamber of Commerce has issued a report warning that China's industrial strategy could jeopardize $650 billion in manufacturing output from G-7 countries by 2030. This figure represents about 12% of manufacturing exports from the world's leading economies. The report highlights that China's approach, an evolution of the "Made in China 2025" initiative, has been bolstered by state subsidies, doubling its manufacturing trade surplus to $2 trillion by 2025. Key sectors such as chemicals, machinery, and automotive manufacturing are particularly vulnerable, with the EU facing a potential $224 billion loss in output. Germany, a major industrial player, could see 120,000 manufacturing jobs at risk. The report also notes China's focus on AI and semiconductors, aiming to deploy 1,000 industrial AI agents by 2025, which could impact high-tech supply chains globally. For the crypto industry, the semiconductor supply chain is crucial, affecting everything from AI data centers to Bitcoin mining. Disruptions due to trade tensions or supply chain shifts could increase costs for blockchain infrastructure. The US Chamber calls for coordinated G-7 responses to mitigate these risks, suggesting that decentralized systems might gain traction as centralized supply chains face scrutiny.