OpenAI’s audacious $500 billion Stargate Project just landed a major boost. Blue Owl Capital, the New York-based investment firm managing over $200 billion in assets, has poured $3 billion into a new data center in New Mexico — part of OpenAI’s broader plan to build the physical foundation for artificial intelligence on a planetary scale.
The funding signals a shift in how Wall Street views AI. It’s no longer just about software or algorithms; it’s about infrastructure—massive, energy-hungry facilities capable of training and serving the next generation of AI models. Blue Owl’s investment, first reported by The Information, cements its growing presence in this emerging frontier, following its recent $7 billion commitment to Meta’s $27 billion Hyperion project in Louisiana.
Doug Ostrover and Marc Lipschultz, Blue Owl’s co-CEOs, framed the move as a bet on speed and scale. Their message echoes a broader trend: private credit firms and institutional investors are moving into AI real estate — the data centers, power grids, and chip supply lines that keep models like ChatGPT running.
Blue Owl Capital Invests $3B in OpenAI’s Stargate Data Center, Expanding Its AI Infrastructure Push
For OpenAI, the money couldn’t come at a more critical moment. Demand for its services continues to surge, and GPU shortages have made access to computing power a bottleneck. The Stargate Project, launched earlier this year with support from SoftBank, Oracle, and Abu Dhabi’s MGX, aims to change that. The consortium plans to invest up to $500 billion in data centers capable of producing 10 gigawatts of power — enough to supply millions of homes — by the end of the decade.
Microsoft, one of OpenAI’s earliest and largest partners, remains deeply embedded in the effort. It retains rights of first refusal on OpenAI’s cloud needs through 2030 and shares in project revenues. But as demand outpaced Azure’s limits, OpenAI expanded its network to include NVIDIA for chips, Arm for processor architecture, and Oracle for cloud orchestration. Together, they form the backbone of an industrial-scale AI ecosystem.
The New Mexico site, backed by Blue Owl, will be built with Crusoe Energy Systems, a company known for powering data centers with clean energy. It joins active Stargate hubs in Abilene and Denton, Texas, where $11.6 billion has already been deployed, and new sites are planned in Michigan and Argentina. By year’s end, the consortium expects to be ahead of schedule on its 10-gigawatt target — a remarkable pace for an initiative that began as a rumored $100 billion Microsoft-OpenAI supercomputer project.
The scale of Stargate has raised eyebrows. Critics like Elon Musk have called its financing “insufficient,” while others question whether SoftBank’s full commitments are actually in place. But skepticism hasn’t slowed momentum. With $15 billion already secured for initial phases and OpenAI projecting $12.7 billion in revenue next year, the project appears to be gaining traction. Oracle CEO Safra Catz recently confirmed the depth of the collaboration, describing it as one of the largest cloud agreements ever signed.
Beyond capital markets, Stargate has become a political talking point. President Trump hailed it as “the largest AI infrastructure project by far in history,” promising jobs and long-term economic impact. The Michigan site alone is expected to create 2,500 union construction jobs when it breaks ground in 2026. Abroad, expansions into regions like Patagonia point to an effort to diversify both power sources and geopolitical exposure.
The broader context is clear: tech giants are in an arms race to secure compute capacity. According to The New York Times, companies including OpenAI, Meta, Amazon, and Google plan to spend over $300 billion on data centers this year, with Morgan Stanley forecasting $400 billion in 2025. For firms like Blue Owl, that’s an opportunity to convert financial muscle into ownership of the infrastructure behind AI — the modern equivalent of oil fields in the digital economy.
For OpenAI, Stargate isn’t just about meeting today’s demand; it’s about building tomorrow’s capacity. The partnership with Blue Owl adds fuel to that vision — and perhaps a glimpse into how the next era of artificial intelligence will be built: one data center, one investor, and one massive power line at a time.



