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Google, Blackstone to launch AI cloud venture to meet data centre demand

By Thomson Reuters May 18, 2026 | 7:13 PM

By Natalia Bueno Rebolledo and Mrinmay Dey

May 18 (Reuters) – Alphabet’s Google and Blackstone said on Monday that they will form an artificial intelligence cloud business venture aimed at ​capitalising on an insatiable demand for AI computing services.

Blackstone, ‌the world’s largest alternative asset manager, will invest an initial $5 billion in equity to help bring 500 megawatts of data centre capacity online in 2027, with further expansion planned over time.

The U.S.-based venture will provide data centre ‌capacity ​along with Google’s custom AI chips, ⁠known as Tensor Processing Units, ⁠or TPUs, through a compute-as-a-service model.

The total investment value could reach $25 billion, including leverage, according to Bloomberg News.

Both companies did not immediately respond to a request for comments on the ​Bloomberg report.

Blackstone has appointed Benjamin Sloss, a long-time Google executive, as CEO of the new venture.

Thomas Kurian, chief executive of ⁠Google Cloud, said the venture would ⁠help address growing demand for TPUs by offering ​organisations additional ways to access computing capacity.

Analysts and investors have said ​Google is taking a sizeable share of new AI-driven ‌computing demand, supported by its business tools and custom chips that have attracted customers such as Anthropic.

“This isn’t the biggest headline number we’ve seen. But it’s a high-quality bet on sustainable growth ⁠in AI infrastructure,” said Brittain Ladd, AI and supply chain consultant at Florida-based Chang Robotics.

BLACKSTONE RAMPS UP AI INVESTMENTS

Blackstone has stepped up investments ⁠in AI-related infrastructure, including ‌data centres, power generation and transmission assets.

Those ⁠investments are valuable as the AI boom pushes ​operators ‌to secure long-term energy supply deals.

The new partnership ​reflects rising ⁠demand for AI infrastructure and the need for large-scale capital deployment, Blackstone President Jon Gray said.

Spending by Big Tech firms on AI infrastructure, including data centres, is expected to top $700 billion in 2026.

(Reporting by Natalia Bueno Rebolledo and Mrinmay Dey in Mexico City; Editing ​by Sherry Jacob-Phillips)