×
Sam Altman proposes EU tech initiative to build out the continent’s AI infrastructure
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Microsoft and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman expressed interest in bringing a Stargate-like AI program to Europe while speaking at the Technical University of Berlin, signaling potential expansion of the major U.S. AI infrastructure initiative.

Key Details: The original U.S. Stargate program represents a $500 billion investment in AI infrastructure over five years, backed by major tech players including OpenAI, SoftBank, and Oracle.

  • The initiative was launched under the Trump administration and represents one of the largest coordinated AI infrastructure investments globally
  • Altman emphasized that European stakeholders would need to determine their own regulatory framework for AI technology
  • OpenAI committed to comply with whatever rules Europe establishes

European Expansion Plans: OpenAI announced plans to open a new office in Munich, Germany, as part of its growing European presence.

  • The company already operates offices in Dublin and London, opened in 2023
  • Additional offices in Paris and Brussels were established in 2024
  • The Munich expansion aims to increase AI accessibility for European businesses and institutions

Strategic Context: Altman stressed the importance of Europe embracing AI technology to maintain global competitiveness.

  • The CEO highlighted the need for collaborative support in developing AI infrastructure
  • This expansion represents a significant step in OpenAI’s international growth strategy
  • Altman is scheduled to attend an upcoming AI summit in Paris with European government leaders

Looking Ahead: While OpenAI’s European expansion signals growing international collaboration in AI development, the success of a potential European Stargate program will largely depend on the region’s ability to balance innovation with its distinct regulatory approach to artificial intelligence.

OpenAI's Altman envisions Stargate-like programme for Europe

Recent News

Smaller AI models slash enterprise costs by up to 100X

Task-specific fine-tuning allows compact models to compete with flagship LLMs for particular use cases like summarization.

Psychologist exposes adoption assumption and other fallacies in pro-AI education debates

The calculator comparison fails because AI can bypass conceptual understanding entirely.

Job alert: Y Combinator-backed Spark seeks engineer for $15B clean energy AI tools

AI agents will automatically navigate regulatory websites like human browsers.