OpenAI Secures $11.6B For Texas Data Center Expansion, Reducing Microsoft Dependence

In This Article:

Zinger Points:

  • Crusoe secures $11.6 billion to build OpenAI's massive 1.2 gigawatt Abilene, Texas data center, part of the $500 billion Project Stargate.

  • Oracle has signed a 15-year lease to anchor the Abilene data center.

  • Crusoe's evolution from gas-powered crypto rigs to liquid-cooled AI supercenters captures the arc of next-gen computing.

AI infrastructure startup Crusoe Energy Systems has secured $11.6 billion in funding commitments to build a massive data center in Abilene, Texas, designed to support OpenAI's expanding computing needs. The new funding round, backed by Blue Owl Capital's Real Assets platform and Primary Digital Infrastructure, brings total capital raised for the project to $15 billion, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Abilene: The Heart of OpenAI’s Infrastructure Expansion

According to Crusoe, the facility marks a critical step in OpenAI's infrastructure strategy. Initially planned as a two-building campus, the project now spans eight buildings. It is expected to deliver 1.2 gigawatts of power capacity, making it one of the largest AI training hubs globally.

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According to the company, construction began last June, with the first two buildings—totaling 200 megawatts—expected to be energized in the first half of this year. A second phase, launched in March, will add six more buildings and is expected to be completed by mid-2026.

Oracle Steps In as Microsoft's Footprint Shrinks

The expansion comes amid growing demand for compute capacity as OpenAI develops increasingly advanced artificial intelligence models. Oracle Corp. (NYSE:ORCL) has signed a 15-year lease to occupy a significant portion of the Abilene campus, according to the Journal.

While Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT) remains OpenAI's largest investor and retains exclusive application programming interface licensing rights, its role in the Abilene project is limited to that of a technology partner, without direct equity involvement. OpenAI has increasingly sought to diversify its infrastructure partnerships, citing concerns over Microsoft's ability to scale fast enough to meet its compute needs, the Journal reported.

Meanwhile, JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) has committed over $7 billion to the data center project, building on a previous $2.3 billion investment, according to The Information.