Unlimited power: OpenAI plans trillion-dollar data center network to power AI growth

Skye Jacobs

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Looking ahead: OpenAI is pushing ahead with some of the largest infrastructure projects ever attempted in the technology industry, unveiling plans for a trillion-dollar network of data centers designed to power AI models on a scale that dwarfs most industrial build-outs in recent memory. OpenAI is presenting the nationwide build-out as a way to revive US manufacturing while supporting tens of thousands of jobs. In January, the company joined President Trump at the White House to announce a $500 billion initiative known as Stargate, billed as a turning point for large-scale reindustrialization.

This week, company executives gave reporters a tour of a massive site near Abilene, Texas, about 180 miles west of Dallas. They said the facility represents the first of many planned locations. Once empty brushland, the 1,100-acre development now contains eight massive data centers with a combined capacity of roughly 900 megawatts.

More than 6,000 workers are currently deployed at the site, working in rotating 10-hour shifts, seven days a week. Gas turbines have been installed to provide backup power, while rows of steel towers rise from the former ranchland.

Oracle, which is building and operating the facilities alongside OpenAI, described the project as the largest AI supercomputing cluster in the world. Standing at the site in the 100-degree heat, Anuj Saharan of OpenAI's computing team highlighted the rapid progress. "There was literally nothing here a year ago," he told reporters.

The first completed building on the campus, painted stark white against the red dirt landscape, is larger than two Walmart Supercenters combined. Inside, tightly packed rows of servers house Nvidia's GB200 chips, with each cluster containing 72 processors. Industry analysts estimate that each unit costs about the same as a base-model Tesla Model 3, though Nvidia does not publicly disclose pricing. The servers are heavily secured: alarms sound if access doors are left open, and cameras monitor each rack to prevent unauthorized entry.

The Abilene campus is only the start. OpenAI said it is developing five additional US sites that are expected to add nearly seven gigawatts of power capacity to its network, built in collaboration with Oracle and SoftBank.

Three of these – an expansion of the Abilene project, another complex in New Mexico north of El Paso, and a location in the Midwest that has not yet been disclosed – are planned to deliver 5.5 gigawatts over the next several years. Two smaller sites near Austin, Texas, and in Lordstown, Ohio, are expected to generate 1.5 gigawatts between them.

With weekly usage of its ChatGPT application now surpassing 700 million, demand has surged far beyond OpenAI's current computing resources. It estimates that it will ultimately need at least 20 gigawatts of capacity to support global demand, equal to about 20 conventional nuclear power plants.

At an estimated $50 billion per gigawatt, this translates to a minimum of one trillion dollars in infrastructure investment. One executive suggested that demand could eventually reach 100 gigawatts, which would push total costs beyond five trillion dollars – a figure larger than the annual GDP of Germany or Japan.

"I don't think we've figured out yet the final form of what financing for compute looks like," OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman told The Wall Street Journal. "But I assume, like in many other technological revolutions, figuring out the right answer to that will unlock a huge amount of value delivered to society."

The company's announcement followed on the heels of a $100 billion deal this week with Nvidia that helped address questions about OpenAI's balance sheet. The momentum comes as SoftBank, once viewed as a central financing partner to OpenAI's data-center expansion, has scaled back ambitions. Of the five new sites, three will be developed with Oracle while SoftBank's involvement will be limited to the Austin- and Ohio-based facilities.

On the ground in Abilene, however, enthusiasm remains tempered. Mayor Weldon W. Hurt acknowledged that residents had raised questions about the site's power and water demands, though he said many of those concerns had since been addressed.

Oracle executives said the complex would support about 1,700 permanent positions once construction finishes, a relatively small number compared to the thousands of temporary construction jobs currently tied to the project. Even so, Hurt described the city as willing to embrace what the project will bring. "We are a railroad town," he said Tuesday. "We have Western heritage, but we are open to progress, always."

Image credit: The Wall Street Journal

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"are planned to deliver 5.5 gigawatts"
"are expected to generate 1.5 gigawatts"

There's no mention of power generation facilities being built. It's written as if the data centers will be generating electricity, which is generally not what server racks do. They consume it.

Clarity: lacking.
 
"are planned to deliver 5.5 gigawatts"
"are expected to generate 1.5 gigawatts"

There's no mention of power generation facilities being built. It's written as if the data centers will be generating electricity, which is generally not what server racks do. They consume it.

Clarity: lacking.
It’s a new thing where the wattage is the measurement of the performance… so if a data center uses 1GW of electricity, you say it gives that much performance… a nice smokescreen to mask how much electricity they are using :)
 
"Mayor Weldon W. Hurt acknowledged that residents had raised questions about the site's power and water demands, though he said many of those concerns had since been addressed."

So... if they raised 10 issues and 3 were addressed, does that satisfy this inane comment?
Well, they did address them, as in the address, they said the residents will get screwed over and have to pay way more for utilities while the corporation with tax breaks pays almost nothing. Typical corrupt small town politician.
 
Sounds like Texas indeed have unlimited power with new fabs and AI data centers springing up left right and center. I am waiting patiently for the day this AI scam blows. AI is not useless, but the way they are marketing it as a all round miracle is questionable.
 
"are planned to deliver 5.5 gigawatts"
"are expected to generate 1.5 gigawatts"

There's no mention of power generation facilities being built. It's written as if the data centers will be generating electricity, which is generally not what server racks do. They consume it.

Clarity: lacking.

100%... I'm like, "When was power generation mentioned? Had to reread it as well.

It is BS in that they're doing it for stupid people. But it does remind us of Conservation. A nuclear power plant does not 'generate' energy. It transforms energy. And that's all we're ever doing, really. Everything around us is energy being transferred one way or the other, efficiently or inefficiently.

Note to myself: Everything will be okay.
 
I'm baffled how OpenAI can continue to operate having never earned profit; truly this is baffling to me. Were any other company to perpetually lose money following an initial hobby-shop period I'm certain they'd be crapped on by the gov't. But OpenAI has incessantly run in the red sans punity, and is now planning to spend, without any historical profit, orders of magnitude more. Clearly this is not really a private entity but rather a gov't one in veil with agenda to gather intel.
 
I'm baffled how OpenAI can continue to operate having never earned profit; truly this is baffling to me. Were any other company to perpetually lose money following an initial hobby-shop period I'm certain they'd be crapped on by the gov't. But OpenAI has incessantly run in the red sans punity, and is now planning to spend, without any historical profit, orders of magnitude more. Clearly this is not really a private entity but rather a gov't one in veil with agenda to gather intel.
Uber? YouTube? How many years did it take them to turn a profit?

Maybe learn how the world really works works? Potential is everything 😛
 
Uber? YouTube? How many years did it take them to turn a profit?

Maybe learn how the world really works works? Potential is everything 😛
Thanks for the reply.
I'm well aware of how the world works, but in order to amuse myself with grandiose conspiracy theories I need to be able to point at potentially normal occurances and paint them as clandestinal gov't interference/oversight.
I choose to colour my world black and white, again, for self-amusement.
 
Uber? YouTube? How many years did it take them to turn a profit?

Maybe learn how the world really works works? Potential is everything 😛

Bullshit. All these companies run on endless debt and credit. Try that as a small business, oh right, the entire USA is a corporation.
 
Trillion-dollar datacenter dream feels like sci-fi but also kinda scary. it’s not just about chips & servers, it’s like building new temples for algorithms. cool jobs & industry boom, but also makes u wonder if power (literal & digital) gets too centered in few hands.
 
I can see future news arising out of this: "Brownouts and power failures become major problem in Texas far worse than when Enron screwed California."
 
"Industry analysts estimate that each unit costs about the same as a base-model Tesla Model 3, though Nvidia does not publicly disclose pricing."

Because providing the value in actual currency is too boring?
In case you were wondering: $38,630
 
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