What is The Stargate Project and why does it matter?
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The Stargate Project announcement on OpenAI’s website ends with a call for collaboration with companies “across the built data centre infrastructure landscape, from power and land to construction to equipment, and everything in between.”

While announced on 21 January, as part of the incoming President’s penchant for spectacle, The Stargate Project was already well underway having been first reported by The Information in March 2024.

The timing of the announcement marks President Trump’s commitment to the US technology leaders that helped elect him, as well as his manifesto promise of US AI hegemony.

Could Stargate be Trump’s own version of Roosevelt’s New Deal, something that Biden himself sought to emulate? The announcement and call for companies to participate in the $500bn project to build US AI infrastructure over the next four years has the ambition and breadth of a New Deal style initiative, albeit miniscule capital expenditure in comparison.

But it is a coalescing of private investment, cross-industry sectors and technology companies in a coordinated attempt to give Trump’s new vision of the US a first mover advantage in what many believe is the biggest technological shift in history.

How significant is Stargate?

Global Data senior analyst Beatriz Valle sees the announcement as an extraordinary development. “It seems the new President elect is itching to go and this demonstrates the importance that the new US administration is placing on AI and AI investment,” said Valle.

The AI infrastructure buildout is currently underway, starting in Texas, according to OpenAI’s announcement which also noted, “we are evaluating potential sites across the country for more campuses as we finalise definitive agreements.” According to OpenAI, some $100bn will be deployed immediately.

According to Valle, the move will have a tremendous impact on data centre investment in the US, involving building up to 20 data centres, propelling technologies on the chipset level. “The fact that Softbank, a Japan based company is spearheading the project demonstrates the US is ready to collaborate with international allies,” she added.

However, collaboration comes alongside trade protections initiated by the Biden administration which implemented export restrictions on AI chips to countries including China and Russia.

“At the policy level, when it comes to the technology market and trade tariffs both administrations - Biden and Trump - behave in similar ways since it was the Biden administration that started US restrictions on the sales of chips to China,” said Valle.