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OpenAI, Oracle and SoftBank to Build Five New AI Data Centers for $500 Billion Stargate Project

OpenAI, Oracle and SoftBank announced plans to construct five new artificial intelligence data centers in the United States as part of their massive Stargate project, an initiative expected to reshape AI infrastructure.

President Donald Trump hosted leading tech CEOs in January to launch Stargate, a private-sector effort aiming to spend up to $500 billion on the compute power needed to support the next generation of AI.

OpenAI and Oracle will build three new facilities in Shackelford County, Texas, Doña Ana County, New Mexico, and an undisclosed Midwestern site. Together with SoftBank and its affiliate, OpenAI will also develop two additional centers in Lordstown, Ohio, and Milam County, Texas.

These new facilities, combined with Oracle-OpenAI’s Abilene, Texas expansion and ongoing projects with CoreWeave, will boost Stargate’s total data center capacity to nearly 7 gigawatts. According to OpenAI, this represents over $400 billion in investments over the next three years. The ultimate goal remains 10 gigawatts of total capacity.

“AI can only fulfill its promise if we build the compute to power it,” OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said in a statement.

The new projects are expected to create 25,000 on-site jobs. The announcement follows Nvidia’s pledge on Monday to invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI and supply data center chips.

To finance Stargate, OpenAI and its partners plan to use debt financing and lease chips, according to sources familiar with the matter.

With backing from Microsoft, OpenAI joins other tech giants pouring billions into AI infrastructure to support services such as ChatGPT and Copilot.

Given AI’s growing importance in sensitive fields like defense—and with China racing to catch up—both the private sector and the Trump administration have made AI infrastructure a strategic priority.

Meta expands Llama AI access to U.S. allies in Europe and Asia

Meta Platforms said Tuesday it will make its Llama artificial intelligence system available to U.S. allies including France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and South Korea, as well as to NATO and European Union institutions. The announcement follows U.S. approval for federal agencies to use Llama earlier this week.

Llama, a large language model capable of processing text, video, images, and audio, will now be deployed more broadly as part of Washington’s effort to strengthen digital cooperation with democratic allies.

Meta said it will work with partners such as Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, Oracle, and Palantir to deliver Llama-based solutions abroad. The company emphasized that its models are released largely free for developers, a strategy CEO Mark Zuckerberg argues will drive innovation, reduce reliance on rivals, and keep engagement strong across Meta’s platforms.

The U.S. General Services Administration confirmed Monday that Llama would be added to its list of approved AI tools for federal use, meeting security and legal standards. By extending access to allies, Meta and Washington aim to align AI infrastructure across friendly nations at a time of intensifying global competition in artificial intelligence.

Oracle appoints Clay Magouyrk and Mike Sicilia as co-CEOs, Safra Catz steps aside

Oracle announced a surprise leadership shakeup on Monday, naming insiders Clay Magouyrk and Mike Sicilia as co-CEOs, replacing longtime chief executive Safra Catz. Catz, who helped transform Oracle into a cloud powerhouse over her 11-year tenure, will remain with the company as vice chair of the board.

Catz’s legacy includes steering Oracle from its roots as a database provider into a global competitor in cloud computing, securing massive AI-related contracts, and driving the company’s market capitalization close to $1 trillion. Shares of Oracle have soared about 85% this year, outpacing rivals Microsoft and Alphabet, buoyed by the AI boom.

  • Mike Sicilia (54) currently oversees Oracle’s cloud-based applications and AI products.

  • Clay Magouyrk (39) manages Oracle’s cloud infrastructure platform, which underpins the company’s AI and data services.

Both executives are well-known to investors, and analysts say their promotion highlights cloud and industry solutions as Oracle’s main growth engines. Evercore ISI noted that with co-founder Larry Ellison staying on as CTO and Catz as executive vice chair, the leadership transition should be smooth.

Oracle is currently central to U.S. data security discussions, hosting TikTok’s U.S. user data on its cloud systems. The company also recently signed one of the largest cloud deals in history with OpenAI, worth an estimated $300 billion in computing power over five years.

Safra Catz, one of the most influential women in tech, first became co-CEO alongside the late Mark Hurd in 2014 after Ellison stepped back from daily operations. Under her leadership, Oracle shares climbed more than 586%. Trained in finance and law, Catz joined Oracle in 1999 after a career on Wall Street and today holds a net worth of $3.3 billion, according to Forbes.

Magouyrk, who joined Oracle from Amazon Web Services in 2014, will receive stock options worth $250 million, while Sicilia, who came via Oracle’s acquisition of Primavera Systems, will receive $100 million in stock options.

The co-CEO model, while less common, is being adopted by several global firms, including investment giant KKR and, briefly, Intel. For Oracle, the dual leadership underscores the scale of its ambitions as cloud and AI reshape the tech landscape.