
The deal underscores an intensifying race to expand the costly, supply-constrained infrastructure required to power artificial intelligence (AI) technology, as companies rush to build the most sophisticated AI models.
The acquisition follows a slew of mega-deals focused on securing coveted compute capacity.
ChatGPT creator OpenAI has, in recent weeks, unveiled agreements totaling about 26GW of computing capacity, enough to power roughly 20 million US homes.
The investment consortium, dubbed the Artificial Intelligence Infrastructure Partnership (AIP), has an initial target of deploying US$30 billion of equity capital, with the potential of reaching US$100 billion, including debt.
This is AIP’s first investment. The transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2026.
“With this investment in Aligned Data Centers, we further our goal of delivering the infrastructure necessary to power the future of AI, ” said Larry Fink, CEO of BlackRock and chairman of AIP.
AIP’s anchor investors also include the Kuwait Investment Authority and Singapore’s state-owned investor Temasek.
Aligned designs, builds and operates data centres for the hyperscalers, neocloud and enterprises.
Its portfolio includes 50 campuses and more than 5GW of operational and planned capacity, including assets under development, located across the US and Latin America.
Aligned will remain headquartered in Dallas, Texas, and will be led by CEO Andrew Schaap.
OpenAI last week unveiled a 6GW AI chip supply deal with AMD that includes an option to buy a stake in the chipmaker, days after disclosing that Nvidia plans to invest up to US$100 billion in the startup and provide it with data centre systems with at least 10GW of capacity.