Trump unveils investments to power AI boom
US President Donald Trump during the inaugural Pennsylvania Energy and Innovation Summit in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on July 15.
PITTSBURGH - US President Donald Trump went to Pennsylvania on July 15 to announce
$92 billion in energy and infrastructure deals intended to meet big tech's soaring demand for electricity to fuel the AI boom.
Mr Trump made the announcement at the inaugural Pennsylvania Energy and Innovation Summit at Carnegie Mellon University, with much of the talk about beating China in the global AI race.
'Today's commitments are ensuring that the future is going to be designed, built and made right here in Pennsylvania and right here in Pittsburgh, and I have to say, right here in the United States of America,' Mr Trump said at the event.
The tech world has fully embraced generative AI as the next wave of technology, but fears are growing that its massive electricity needs cannot be met by current infrastructure, particularly in the United States.
Generative AI requires enormous computing power, mainly to run the energy-hungry processors from Nvidia, the California-based company that has become the world's most valuable company by market capitalisation.
Officials expect that by 2028, tech companies will need as much as five gigawatts of power for AI – enough electricity to power roughly five million homes.
Top executives from Palantir, Anthropic, Exxon and Chevron attended the event.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore Las Vegas Sands' new development part of S'pore's broader, more ambitious transformation: PM Wong
Singapore 'Kpods broke our marriage, shattered our children': Woman on husband's vape addiction
Business US tariffs may last well after Trump; crucial for countries to deepen trade ties: SM Lee
World Trump says Indonesia to face 19% tariff under trade deal
Multimedia Telling the Singapore story for 180 years
Life Walking for exercise? Here are tips on how to do it properly
Singapore CDL's long-time director Philip Yeo to depart after boardroom feud
Singapore 'Nobody deserves to be alone': Why Mummy and Acha have fostered over 20 children in the past 22 years
The funding will cover new data centres, power generation, grid infrastructure, AI training, and apprenticeship programs.
Race to beat China
Among investments, Google committed US$25 billion (S$32 billion) to build AI-ready data centres in Pennsylvania and surrounding regions.
'We support President Trump's clear and urgent direction that our nation invest in AI... so that America can continue to lead in AI,' said Ms Ruth Porat, Google's president and chief investment officer.
The search engine giant also announced a partnership with Brookfield Asset Management to modernise two hydropower facilities in Pennsylvania, representing 670 megawatts of capacity on the regional grid.
Investment group Blackstone pledged more than US$25 billion to fund new data centres and energy infrastructure.
US Senator David McCormick, from Pennsylvania, said the investments 'are of enormous consequence to Pennsylvania, but they are also crucial to the future of the nation'.
His comments reflect the growing sentiment in Washington that the United States must not lose ground to China in the race to develop AI.
'We are way ahead of China and the plants are starting up, the construction is starting up,' Mr Trump said.
The US president launched the 'Stargate' project in January, aimed at investing up to US$500 billion in US AI infrastructure – primarily in response to growing competition with China.
Japanese tech investor SoftBank, ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, and Oracle are investing US$100 billion in the initial phase.
Mr Trump has also reversed many policies adopted by the previous Biden administration that imposed checks on developing powerful AI algorithms and limits on exports of advanced technology to certain allied countries.
He is expected to outline his own blueprint for AI advancement later in July. AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
25 minutes ago
- Straits Times
South Korea's President Lee extends apology to bereaved families of major disasters
Find out what's new on ST website and app. The four major disasters include a Jeju Air plane crash in December 2024, where 179 people were killed. SEOUL - South Korea President Lee Jae Myung on July 16 extended an apology to the families of those who lost their lives in what the presidential office called the four major disasters of the past decade. Mr Lee told the families that previous administrations had failed to admit the state's liability in the deadly incidents and promised to properly compensate the victims and families left behind. 'As the head of state, I extend my formal apology on behalf of the government, because the government failed to fulfill its responsibility to protect the lives and safety of the people,' Mr Lee told some 200 participants at the event held at Cheong Wa Dae in Seoul, which was formerly a presidential complex. Among the participants were those who lost loved ones in either the Sewol ferry disaster that took 304 lives in April 2014; the Itaewon crowd crush in Seoul where 179 people died in October 2022; the inundation of an underpass in Cheongju , North Chungcheong province, that killed 14 people in July 2023; and a Jeju Air plane crash following a hard landing at an airport in Muan, South Jeolla province, where 179 people were killed in December 2024. 'Some may think that the truth is still being hidden. Some may think they were not compensated. Some may think there were not enough apologies, or words of solace,' Mr Lee said. 'I will work to ensure that no more citizens will be mistreated due to the absence of the state,' he added. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

Straits Times
25 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Lula's approval ticks up in Brazil after Trump threatens tariffs, poll shows
FILE PHOTO: Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva wears a cap that reads \"Brazil belongs to the Brazilians\" as he gestures during ceremony to announce the start of payments under the Income Transfer Program for farmers and fishermen, in Linhares, Espirito Santo state, Brazil July 11, 2025. Ricardo Stuckert/Brazilian Presidency/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo SAO PAULO - Approval for Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's government rose for the first time this year, a new poll showed on Wednesday, after his U.S. counterpart Donald Trump announced a 50% tariff on imports from Brazil starting in August. The Quaest poll commissioned by brokerage Genial showed that 43% of those surveyed approve of Lula's administration, up from 40% in the previous poll in May. Meanwhile, the government's disapproval fell from 57% to 53% in the period. According to the poll, 66% of the respondents were aware of President Trump's letter announcing 50% tariffs on Brazil, while 33% were not. In the letter, Trump linked the tariffs to Brazil's treatment of former President Jair Bolsonaro, who is on trial over charges of plotting a coup to stop Lula from taking office in 2023. The poll showed that 72% believe that Trump is wrong to impose tariffs on Brazil due to what he sees as persecution of Bolsonaro, while 19% think the measure is right. Despite being barred from holding public office until 2030, Bolsonaro insists he will run against Lula in a rematch in next year's election, arguing he is the only figure on the right who can defeat the incumbent. Lula, 79, has hinted that he could run for reelection. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Over 600 Telegram groups in Singapore selling, advertising vapes removed by HSA Singapore 2 weeks' jail for man caught smuggling over 1,800 vapes and pods into Singapore Singapore Jail for man who fatally hit his daughter, 2, while driving van without licence Singapore Primary 1 registration: 38 primary schools to conduct ballot in Phase 2A Singapore ComfortDelGro to introduce new taxi cancellation, waiting fee policy Business Cathay Cineplexes gets fresh demands to pay up $3.3m debt for Century Square, Causeway Point outlets Singapore Instead of overcomplicating COE system, Govt has ensured affordable transport for all: SM Lee to Jamus Lim Singapore Baby died after mum took abortion pills and gave birth in toilet; coroner records an open verdict The Genial/Quaest poll surveyed 2,004 eligible voters in person between July 10 and July 14. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus two percentage points. REUTERS

Straits Times
25 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Russian court seizes stake in bakery over ownership prosecutors say is 'extremist'
Find out what's new on ST website and app. A Russian court on Wednesday said it had seized 50% of shares in a wholesale bakery as part of interim measures in a lawsuit brought by state prosecutors that seeks to label the company's ultimate owners as extremist. Moscow has placed around a dozen foreign-owned assets under state management since launching the full-scale war in Ukraine in February 2022, and Russia's general prosecutor has stepped up the seizure of domestic assets through the courts this year. The Rodniki District Court in the Ivanovo region northeast of Moscow said it had seized half of the shares of Russian company Rizhsky Khleb (or Riga Bread). That Russian unit forms part of a wider group of bakery assets owned by Latvian and Ukrainian citizens, the court said. Rizhsky Khleb did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Russia's deputy prosecutor general filed a claim with the Rodniki court on Tuesday, the court said, arguing that the bakery association that includes Rizhsky Khleb be recognised as extremist over links to Ukraine. In 2024, Russia passed a law allowing the seizure of property in Russia from people abroad who spread what Moscow considers false news about the army, incite extremist activity or call for sanctions against Russia. REUTERS