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Federal Officials Announce Planned Data Center In Red State That Could Potentially Be World’s Largest
Trump administration officials announced a partnership to develop a massive data center in Ohio that could potentially be the largest in the world.
“We are going to do the largest construction project in the country,” Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said alongside Energy Secretary Chris Wright and SoftBank Group Corp. Chief Executive Officer Masayoshi Son, according to Bloomberg.
“SoftBank, a Japanese company, is planning to build a 10-gigawatt power plant, including 9.2 gigawatts of natural gas generation, that will connect to the local grid and power to a new 10-gigawatt data center development,” 10TV stated.
The overall investment into the campus is estimated at approximately $500 billion.
The expected cost of the project’s first phase is upward of $40 billion.
Son said the AI data center would be the largest in the world.
“This is the center of our superintelligence,” Son said, according to 10TV.
The largest data center in the world is planned to be built in Ohio, and it'll cost up to $40,000,000,000 to construct.
The 3,700 acre center will require 10 Gigawatts, 1/3 of Ohio's entire power grid capacity, to run. pic.twitter.com/QB77WZiDXP
— Pubity (@pubity) March 21, 2026
Bloomberg explained further:
While the US is witnessing a historic scramble by tech companies to build out artificial intelligence computing, the project’s scale described by Son and Trump officials has little precedent. At 10 gigawatts, the center would be among the largest — if not the largest — in the world. For context, a single gigawatt of capacity can power roughly 750,000 homes at any given moment.
SoftBank is planning to construct the AI computing complex at a former uranium enrichment complex owned by the US Energy Department. It would be powered with roughly $33 billion worth of natural gas-fired electricity.
The company expects the first phase of the data center project to include about 800 megawatts of power, cost $30 billion to $40 billion and be completed in early 2028.
Son unveiled the project about 14 months after he, OpenAI’s Sam Altman and Oracle Corp.’s Larry Ellison pledged to build $500 billion in data centers and AI infrastructure as part of the so-called Stargate venture. Since then, OpenAI has expanded Stargate to include agreements for data-center deals made outside of the original LLC.
The Ohio project shows how SoftBank’s ambitions have further risen. “Instead of many locations, many years,” Son said, “now we are delivering $500 billion in one campus.” (SoftBank remains involved with multiple Stargate-branded sites in the US.)
Soaring demand for AI tools has touched off a worldwide expansion of data centers, with systems requiring enormous amounts of computing capacity. A backlash over the buildout is growing across the US centered on the increasing costs of water and electricity, both of which data centers require in large volumes.
Softbank is working to build a massive AI data center on federally owned land in Ohio that it’s planning to power with roughly $33 billion worth of natural gas-fired electricity to be installed by the end of the decade https://t.co/JnywzrVUWj
— Bloomberg (@business) March 20, 2026
“Yesterday in Ohio, we broke ground on a new partnership to build more than 9 gigawatts of natural gas power generation and a data center complex that will provide thousands of jobs and result in LOWER electricity costs,” Wright said on Saturday.
Yesterday in Ohio, we broke ground on a new partnership to build more than 9 gigawatts of natural gas power generation and a data center complex that will provide thousands of jobs and result in LOWER electricity costs. pic.twitter.com/lXKpQBhtKw
— Secretary Chris Wright (@SecretaryWright) March 21, 2026
“In the Biden Administration, they celebrated the closing of power plants. In President Trump’s Administration, we celebrate the construction of new power plants to grow the capacity of the grid and push down prices,” he added.
In the Biden Administration, they celebrated the closing of power plants.
In President Trump's Administration, we celebrate the construction of new power plants to grow the capacity of the grid and push down prices. pic.twitter.com/ccQUCoCQjW
— Secretary Chris Wright (@SecretaryWright) March 20, 2026
10TV has more:
Son said over time he is looking to invest $1 trillion in the U.S. data center space.
Since SoftBank will generate its own power in the natural gas plant, the CEO and federal officials save this project will not raise electric bills for residents.
Federal officials echoed that message.
“This will produce reliable, affordable energy in the USA. It will drive down the price of local electricity,” said U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick.
U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright told 10TV there will be oversight to ensure residents to not see an increase to their bills.
“The specific agreements we are striking with data center developers, as represented in the Ratepayer Protection Pledge that President Trump led, will guarantee that data center development will actually stop electricity price regions in your region and ultimately put in place the ability to decline electricity prices,” he said. “If you are mad about high electricity prices as most Americans are, data centers are the answers, not the problem.”
SoftBank is investing $4 billion to improve AEP Ohio’s infrastructure in the region.
At the peak of construction, project leaders estimate 35,000 construction jobs and 2,500 permanent jobs once the data center is complete.
“If it was done today, it would be larger than all of the other data centers in the world combined, so it is gigantic in scale,” Wright said.
The data center is expected to be operational in two years.
Watch additional coverage below: