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Trump meets with tech, energy and government executives to push AI

The President Donald Trump, along with executives of some of the biggest U.S. energy and tech companies will be attending a summit on Tuesday in Pittsburgh as the Administration prepares new measures to drive the U.S. growth of artificial intelligence.

The top economic rivals U.S.A. and China have entered a technological arms-race to see who can dominate AI, as this technology becomes more important in every area of life from the boardrooms of corporations to the battlefield.

The Energy and Innovation Summit, to be held at Carnegie Mellon University, is expected to attract tech executives and representatives from leading energy and technology firms, including Meta, Microsoft and Alphabet, to discuss ways to position the U.S. to become a leader in AI. The summit, organized by U.S. Senator Dave McCormick from Pennsylvania, a Republican allie, will announce $70 billion worth of artificial intelligence and energy investment in the state.

Big Tech is scrambling for vast quantities of electricity to power its energy-guzzling, data-intensive centers. This is necessary to support the rapid expansion of AI. Google announced a $3 billion deal for electricity and CoreWeave a $6 billion AI Data Center.

Semafor reports that Google will invest $25billion in regional datacenters, while FirstEnergy is investing $15billion in Pennsylvania's grid. Khaldoon al-Mubarak, Rene Haas, Larry Fink, Darren Woods, ExxonMobil and Brendan Bechtel, Bechtel, and Dario Amedei, of Anthropic, are among the CEOs who will attend. White House will consider executive actions to ease the connection of power-generating projects with the grid, and to provide federal land to build data centers to expand AI technology.

The administration is also considering streamlining the permitting process for data centers. This would involve creating a national Clean Water Act permit rather than forcing companies to apply state-by-state.

Mike Sommers, the head of the influential American Petroleum Institute said that executive action was welcomed in order to unlock energy for powering the data centers. However, a more durable and long-lasting solution is required.

Sommers told. Trump had ordered in January that his administration produce an AI Action Plan to make America the "world capital of artificial intelligence" by reducing regulatory barriers and promoting its rapid growth.

The National Security Council will also be contributing to the report. It is due on July 23. Reports indicate that the White House may declare July 23 as "AI Action Day", to bring attention to the report, and to demonstrate its commitment towards expanding the industry.

The U.S. is experiencing record-breaking power demand this year, after almost two decades of stagnation. This is due to the growth in AI and cloud computing data centres across the nation. Demand is leading to new deals between technology companies and the power industry, such as the attempt by Constellation Energy to restart the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania.

This surge in demand has raised concerns about electricity shortages which could increase electricity bills, and even lead to blackouts. Meanwhile, Big Tech is slowed down as it competes with countries like China for artificial intelligence dominance. (Reporting and editing by Colleen Jensen, Stephen Coates and Stephen Jenkins; Additional reporting by Laila KEARNEY in New York)

(source: Reuters)