
Meta has announced the launch of Meta Compute, a new initiative focused on expanding the company’s artificial intelligence infrastructure. The announcement was made by CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who said the effort will play a central role in Meta’s long-term AI strategy.
Meta has previously signalled that it plans to invest heavily in AI infrastructure. During an earnings call last year, Meta CFO Susan Li said that building leading AI infrastructure would be a core advantage in developing competitive AI models and product experiences. The launch of Meta Compute formalises that direction.
According to Zuckerberg, Meta plans to dramatically increase its energy footprint over the coming years. He said the company expects to build tens of gigawatts of capacity this decade, with plans to scale to hundreds of gigawatts over time. A gigawatt represents one billion watts of electrical power, underscoring the scale of the infrastructure Meta intends to deploy to support AI workloads.
Zuckerberg described infrastructure development as a strategic advantage, noting that how Meta engineers, invests in and partners to build computing capacity will directly influence its ability to compete in AI. The growing demand for AI computing has raised broader concerns about energy consumption, with estimates suggesting US power usage linked to AI could rise sharply over the next decade.
Meta Compute will be led by a group of senior executives. Santosh Janardhan, who has been with the company since 2009 and currently leads global infrastructure, will oversee technical architecture, software systems, silicon development, developer productivity, and the operation of Meta’s global data centre and network footprint.
Another key leader is Daniel Gross, who joined Meta last year. Gross is a co-founder of Safe Superintelligence, alongside former OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever. At Meta, Gross will lead a new group responsible for long-term capacity planning, supplier relationships, industry analysis, and business modelling tied to infrastructure expansion.
Zuckerberg also said that Dina Powell McCormick will work with governments on efforts related to building, deploying, investing in and financing Meta’s infrastructure projects. Powell McCormick joined Meta recently after serving in government roles earlier in her career.
Meta’s move comes amid an industry-wide push to build AI-ready cloud and data centre capacity. Several major technology companies have announced large capital expenditure plans focused on AI infrastructure. Microsoft has been expanding partnerships with infrastructure providers, while Alphabet recently acquired data centre firm Intersect.
Meta has not yet shared detailed timelines or spending figures tied specifically to Meta Compute. However, the announcement makes clear that infrastructure development is now a central pillar of the company’s AI ambitions.
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