Trump highlights partnership investing $500 billion in AI
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[January 22, 2025] By
JOSH BOAK and ZEKE MILLER
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump on Tuesday talked up a joint
venture investing up to $500 billion for infrastructure tied to
artificial intelligence by a new partnership formed by OpenAI, Oracle
and SoftBank.
The new entity, Stargate, will start building out data centers and the
electricity generation needed for the further development of the
fast-evolving AI in Texas, according to the White House. The initial
investment is expected to be $100 billion and could reach five times
that sum.
“It's big money and high quality people,” said Trump, adding that it's
“a resounding declaration of confidence in America’s potential” under
his new administration.
Joining Trump fresh off his inauguration at the White House were
Masayoshi Son of SoftBank, Sam Altman of OpenAI and Larry Ellison of
Oracle. All three credited Trump for helping to make the project
possible, even though building has already started and the project goes
back to 2024.
“This will be the most important project of this era," said Altman, CEO
of OpenAI.
Ellison noted that the data centers are already under construction with
10 being built so far. The chairman of Oracle suggested that the project
was also tied to digital health records and would make it easier to
treat diseases such as cancer by possibly developing a customized
vaccine.
“This is the beginning of golden age,” said Son, referencing Trump's
statement that the U.S. would be in a “golden age” with him back in the
White House.
Son, a billionaire based in Japan, already committed in December to
invest $100 billion in U.S. projects over the next four years. He
previously committed to $50 billion in new investments ahead of Trump's
first term, which included a large stake in the troubled office-sharing
company WeWork.
While Trump has seized on similar announcements to show that his
presidency is boosting the economy, there were already expectations of a
massive buildout in data centers and electricity plants needed for the
development of AI, which holds the promise of increasing productivity by
automating work but also the risk of displacing jobs if poorly
implemented.
The initial plans for Stargate go back to the Biden administration. Tech
news outlet The Information first reported on the project in March 2024.
OpenAI has long relied on Microsoft data centers to build its AI
systems, but it has increasingly signaled an interest in building its
own data centers.
OpenAI wrote in a letter to the Biden administration’s Commerce
Department last fall that planning and permitting for such projects “can
be lengthy and complex, particularly for energy infrastructure.”
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President Donald Trump speaks in the Roosevelt Room at the White
House, Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025, in Washington, as Softbank CEO
Masayoshi Son, Oracle chief technology officer Larry Ellison and
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, listen. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)
Other partners in the project
include Microsoft, investor MGX and the chipmakers Arm and NVIDIA,
according to separate statements by Oracle and OpenAI.
The push to build data centers predates Trump's presidency. Last
October, the financial company Blackstone estimated that the U.S.
would see $1 trillion invested in data centers over five years, with
another $1 trillion being committed internationally.
Those estimates for investments suggest that much of the new capital
will go through Stargate as OpenAI has established itself as a
sector leader with the 2022 launch of its ChatGPT, a chatbot that
captivated the public imagination with its ability to answer complex
questions and perform basic business tasks.
The White House has put an emphasis on making it easier to build out
new electricity generation in anticipation of AI's expansion,
knowing that the United States is in a competitive race against
China to develop a technology increasingly being adopted by
businesses.
Still, the regulatory outlook for AI remains somewhat uncertain as
Trump on Monday overturned the 2023 order signed by then-President
Joe Biden to create safety standards and watermarking of
AI-generated content, among other goals, in hopes of putting
guardrails on the technology's possible risks to national security
and economic well-being.
CBS News first reported that Trump would be announcing the AI
investment.
Trump supporter Elon Musk, worth more than $400 billion, was an
early investor in OpenAI but has since challenged its move to
for-profit status and has started his own AI company, xAI. Musk is
also in charge of the “Department of Government Efficiency” created
formally on Monday by Trump with the goal of reducing government
spending.
Trump previously in January announced a $20 billion investment by
DAMAC Properties in the United Arab Emirates to build data centers
tied to AI.
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AP reporter Matt O'Brien contributed to this report from Providence,
Rhode Island.
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