Meta plans to double computing capacity to 14 gigawatts by 2027
An internal memo reveals Meta plans to double its AI computing power by 2027, with record spending and a new gigawatt-scale data centre in Canada.
Meta is preparing the biggest infrastructure expansion in its history: according to an internal memo that surfaced this week, the company plans to double its total computing capacity to 14 gigawatts by 2027, with 7 gigawatts coming online this year alone. For perspective, one gigawatt is roughly the output of a nuclear power plant — and Meta wants fourteen of them just to train and serve AI models.
How much is Meta spending in 2026?
This year’s outlay is running at the very top of the range flagged to markets: up to 145 billion dollars. The most visible piece is the new data centre in Sturgeon County, in the Canadian province of Alberta — the company’s first in Canada, a C$13 billion (about US$9.2 billion) investment with an initial one gigawatt of capacity and room to scale to 1.8. The memo also reveals long-term contracts for memory with Samsung, flash storage with Sandisk and fibre optics with Sumitomo — locked in mid-memory-shortage, which says plenty about the urgency.
Who makes the chips?
Increasingly, Meta itself. Iris, its in-house AI accelerator, enters production at TSMC in September, with Broadcom as design partner under an agreement extended through 2029 — and the company wants to ship a new chip every six months. It is the same silicon race that has animated the whole sector, from SK Hynix’s blockbuster Nasdaq debut to rivals’ giant orders, and it lands in a year when the company is also facing regulatory pressure in Brussels. The company’s official infrastructure announcements are published in Meta’s newsroom.
For investors, the question is the one that haunts this whole cycle: how much of this colossal capital comes back as revenue — and when. At the current pace, the answer costs 14 gigawatts to find out.
By Beatriz Mota
Image: LPS.1 / Wikimedia Commons (CC0)