Anthropic Secures Multi-Gigawatt AI Compute Deal with Google and Broadcom

The compute resources will be used to train and deploy Anthropic’s flagship Claude AI models.

Anthropic Secures Multi-Gigawatt AI Compute Deal with Google and Broadcom

Anthropic has announced a major expansion of its infrastructure strategy, signing a new agreement with Google and Broadcom to secure multiple gigawatts of next-generation artificial intelligence compute capacity.

The deal will provide access to advanced tensor processing units (TPUs), with capacity expected to come online starting in 2027. The compute resources will be used to train and deploy Anthropic’s flagship Claude AI models, as demand for generative AI tools continues to surge globally.

“This groundbreaking partnership with Google and Broadcom is a continuation of our disciplined approach to scaling infrastructure: we are building the capacity necessary to serve the exponential growth we have seen in our customer base while also enabling Claude to define the frontier of AI development,” said Krishna Rao, CFO of Anthropic.

The agreement marks one of Anthropic’s largest infrastructure commitments to date, reflecting the growing importance of access to high-performance computing in the AI industry. Multi-gigawatt capacity agreements are increasingly becoming a competitive differentiator as companies race to develop more advanced models.

Anthropic also revealed strong business momentum alongside the announcement. The company said its annualised revenue run rate has surpassed $30 billion, up from approximately $9 billion at the end of 2025, highlighting rapid enterprise adoption of its AI products.

The expanded partnership builds on Anthropic’s broader multi-cloud strategy, which includes infrastructure from Google, Amazon Web Services (AWS), and NVIDIA-powered systems. By diversifying compute sources, the company aims to ensure scalability and resilience as AI workloads grow more complex.

In October last year, Anthropic announced plans to scale its use of TPUs to as many as one million units.