Meta announces major nuclear power agreements for AI infrastructure

Meta has secured agreements with three companies to obtain 6.6 gigawatts of nuclear power by 2035, supporting its AI projects including a new data center in Ohio. The deals involve Vistra, TerraPower, and Oklo, highlighting the tech giant's push into nuclear energy. This move underscores growing reliance on nuclear for powering AI ambitions.

Meta Platforms has revealed three significant nuclear energy agreements aimed at fueling its expanding AI infrastructure, particularly the Prometheus supercluster—a 1-gigawatt data center under construction in Ohio.

The partnerships, announced on January 9, 2026, are expected to deliver a total of 6.6 gigawatts of power by 2035. With TerraPower, Meta will fund the development of two new Natrium reactors, which use sodium as a coolant instead of water, capable of producing up to 690 megawatts as early as 2032. The agreement also grants Meta rights to energy from six additional reactors, adding 2.1 gigawatts by 2035.

In a separate deal with Oklo, Meta anticipates 1.2 gigawatts coming online by 2030 through multiple reactors. This collaboration is poised to create thousands of construction and operations jobs in Ohio. Notably, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman holds just over 4 percent of Oklo and is one of its largest investors. Meta will also finance Oklo's purchase of uranium for its reactors, signaling strong confidence in the startup's technology.

The third agreement with Vistra emphasizes extending the life of existing plants. Through 20-year contracts, Meta will purchase more than 2.1 gigawatts from Vistra's Ohio facilities, while supporting added capacity totaling 433 megawatts at those sites and another in Pennsylvania, expected in the early 2030s.

This initiative builds on Meta's previous 20-year deal with Constellation Energy and reflects a broader trend among big tech firms. For instance, Microsoft is reopening the Three Mile Island plant as its sole customer under a similar long-term arrangement. These moves address the surging energy demands of AI, though challenges persist in commercializing new reactor designs.

Makala yanayohusiana

President Trump shakes hands with tech CEOs signing the Ratepayer Protection Pledge at the White House, with AI data centers symbolized in the background.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Tech giants sign White House pledge to cover AI data center power costs amid backlash

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI

On March 4, 2026, leading tech firms including Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, Oracle, and xAI signed the non-binding Ratepayer Protection Pledge at the White House, committing to fund new power generation and infrastructure for AI data centers to shield consumers from rising electricity bills. President Trump hailed it as a 'historic win,' but critics question its enforceability amid growing environmental and economic concerns.

Meta has agreed to fund seven new natural gas power plants and extensive energy infrastructure to support its largest data center under construction in Richland Parish, Louisiana. The deal with Entergy Louisiana includes 240 miles of transmission lines and battery storage, as reported by the Wall Street Journal. This follows a non-binding pledge by tech companies to cover power costs for AI data centers.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Meta has quietly finalized a large-scale agreement with Amazon Web Services to rent its AI infrastructure, moving away from owning chips and expanding its own data centers. The deal marks an unprecedented shift to relying on AWS's backbone for AI needs.

Documents indicate Google plans to operate one of the largest data centers in the United States in southeast Nebraska, powered by a Tenaska natural gas plant that could generate up to 3,000 megawatts. The project, which may incorporate carbon capture technology, hinges on a state bill allowing private power plants to connect to the public grid. Tenaska has secured options on over 2,600 acres for the site.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Permits for 11 natural gas-powered data centers across the United States project annual greenhouse gas emissions exceeding 129 million tons—more than Morocco released in 2024. Linked to AI companies OpenAI, Meta, Microsoft, and xAI, these facilities underscore the fossil fuel reliance in the data center boom fueling AI expansion, according to a WIRED review of air permit documents.

A US company has developed autonomous ocean platforms to handle AI computing demands with wave-generated electricity. Panthalassa announced $140 million in funding last week for the project.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Google has signed a data center deal that includes a 20-year commitment to add new clean power. The project involves building a data center in Michigan.

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