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OpenAI Expands Stargate Scope, Eyes Debt Financing to Secure Chips

OpenAI is broadening the scope of its massive Stargate infrastructure project, originally unveiled at the White House earlier this year as a $500 billion initiative with partners including SoftBank and Oracle. Executives now say Stargate encompasses nearly all of OpenAI’s work involving data centers and AI chips, stretching beyond the original plan.

Initially conceived as a new entity for mega-scale AI infrastructure, Stargate has since expanded to cover projects predating its January announcement. OpenAI argues that only massive computing systems like Stargate can power the next phase of the AI revolution.

To finance its chip needs, the company plans to adopt creative strategies including debt financing and chip leasing, estimating savings of 10–15% by renting instead of buying GPUs outright. A newly announced partnership with Nvidia—worth up to $100 billion—will provide $10 billion in upfront cash and long-term backing for data center expansion.

CEO Sam Altman, who has long argued that data centers are the lifeblood of AI, said his goal is to reach the point of building “a gigawatt of new AI infrastructure every week.” Speaking at a briefing in Abilene, Texas—home to Stargate’s flagship site—he acknowledged investor concerns about a potential bubble but insisted long-term growth justifies the scale.

The Abilene facility, under construction by Oracle and Crusoe, spans more than 1,100 acres and employs thousands. The site is said to contain fiber optic cable long enough to stretch from Earth to the Moon and back.

Stargate’s rollout has faced delays due to partner negotiations and site selection challenges, according to SoftBank executives. Still, OpenAI, Oracle, and SoftBank this week announced five new U.S. data centers, bringing Stargate’s active projects to nearly 7 gigawatts of the 10 gigawatts originally targeted.

Executives said Microsoft, OpenAI’s longtime sponsor, will not be included in certain Stargate projects, following negotiations to allow OpenAI to partner more broadly.

The company stressed the urgency: demand for ChatGPT and related tools has already forced OpenAI to delay international product launches due to insufficient compute.

Industry experts note that financing remains a major hurdle. Of the roughly $50 billion cost for a new hyperscale data center, about $15 billion covers land and buildings—while the rest goes toward GPUs, which are both costly and in short supply. Following Meta’s example, which secured $29 billion from outside financiers for a Louisiana data center, OpenAI is expected to rely heavily on debt markets to fund its future sites, with Nvidia’s equity stake boosting lender confidence.

Despite bottlenecks in GPU supply chains, Altman maintains that rapid infrastructure buildouts are essential: “We cannot fall behind in the need to put the infrastructure together to make this revolution happen.”

AI Startup Modular Raises $250 Million to Take On Nvidia’s Software Dominance

AI startup Modular announced Wednesday it has raised $250 million in fresh funding, giving the company a valuation of $1.6 billion as it looks to loosen Nvidia’s grip on the AI computing ecosystem.

The round, which nearly tripled Modular’s valuation from two years ago, was led by the U.S. Innovative Technology Fund with participation from DFJ Growth and existing backers GV, General Catalyst, and Greylock.

Founded in 2022 by former Apple and Google engineers, Modular has built a platform that lets developers run AI applications across multiple types of chips without rewriting code for each one. Its clients include cloud providers such as Oracle and Amazon, as well as chipmakers Nvidia and AMD.

Nvidia’s dominance—holding more than 80% of the high-end AI chip market—is reinforced by its proprietary CUDA software, which locks in over 4 million developers worldwide. Modular positions itself as a neutral alternative, branding its approach the “Switzerland strategy.”

Co-founder and CEO Chris Lattner emphasized that Modular isn’t aiming to topple Nvidia directly. “What we’re focused on is not like pushing down Nvidia or crushing them. It’s more about enabling a level playing field so that other people can compete,” he said.

The company plans to sell its software directly to enterprises on a usage-based model and through revenue-sharing deals with cloud providers. Investors are betting that a multi-vendor AI hardware future is inevitable. DFJ Growth partner Sam Fort described Modular as “VMware for the AI era,” enabling workloads to move seamlessly across different chip vendors.

With around 130 employees, Modular plans to use the new capital to grow its engineering and sales teams and to expand beyond AI inference into the more demanding AI training market.

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.