China's 2026 Government Work Report explicitly proposed "implementing new infrastructure projects such as ultra-large-scale intelligent computing clusters and computing-power collaboration, strengthening nationwide integrated computing power monitoring and scheduling, and supporting the development of public cloud." This first inclusion of "computing-power collaboration" marks the formal elevation of this concept from local pilot projects and departmental policies to a national strategic deployment. The large-scale construction of intelligent computing clusters will directly drive demand for high-performance storage systems, particularly the ultra-fast read/write speeds and massive storage required for large model training. While driving upgrades to underlying infrastructure, this also places higher demands on data flow and real-time response capabilities, thereby promoting the large-scale deployment of technologies such as all-flash storage and distributed storage. Storage, as a core support for computing power, is experiencing a dual impetus from policy and demand.