Anthropic on Wednesday announced an ambitious new data center partnership with UK-based neocloud provider Fluidstack, committing $50 billion to build facilities across the United States to meet growing computing needs.
The data centers will be located in Texas and New York and are expected to be operational throughout 2026. The company described these sites as “custom-built for Anthropic with a focus on maximizing workload efficiency.”
“We are moving closer to AI that will accelerate scientific discovery and help solve complex problems in ways never before possible,” Anthropic CEO and co-founder Dario Amodei (pictured above) said in a statement. “To realize that potential, we need an infrastructure that can support continued development at the frontier.”
Because of the high computing demands of Anthropic’s Claude family of models, the company already has significant cloud partnerships with both Google and Amazon (also investors). But this is the company’s first major effort to build custom infrastructure. While the $50 billion in expenses is large, it’s in line with the company’s internal revenue projections, with Anthropic reportedly reaching $70 billion in revenue and $17 billion in cash flow by 2028.
While $50 billion represents a huge commitment in both funding and computing power, it still dwarfs similar projects by Anthropic’s competitors. Meta has committed to building $600 billion worth of data centers over the next three years, and the Stargate partnership between SoftBank, OpenAI, and Oracle is already planning $500 billion in infrastructure spending. This spending has raised concerns about an AI bubble due to weak demand and misallocation of spending.
The project has been a huge success for Fluidstack, a relatively young neo-cloud company that has become the vendor of choice in the AI construction boom. Founded in 2017, the company was named in February as a lead partner in a 1GW French government-backed AI project worth more than $11 billion. According to Forbes, the company already has partnerships with Meta, Black Forest Labs, and France’s Mistral.
Fluidstack was also one of the first third-party vendors to receive Google’s custom-built TPUs, which was a huge vote of confidence for the company.
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