Strengthening the U.S. AI supply chain through domestic manufacturing
TL;DR
OpenAI's new RFP aims to strengthen U.S. AI supply chains through domestic manufacturing of components like data center hardware and consumer electronics, supporting job creation and technological leadership.
Key Takeaways
- •OpenAI is launching a Request for Proposals (RFP) to boost U.S.-based manufacturing for AI supply chain components, including data center inputs and robotics.
- •The initiative supports broader goals of reindustrialization, job creation, and strengthening American leadership in AI technology.
- •Advanced AI infrastructure requires a diverse ecosystem beyond chips and data centers, including cooling systems, power electronics, and assembly capacity.
- •Responses to the RFP will inform partnerships and procurement strategies, with a submission deadline of June 2026.
Tags
Building the infrastructure required to power advanced AI presents a historic opportunity to strengthen domestic supply chains and reindustrialize the country(opens in a new window). If we seize it, we can catalyze U.S. manufacturing, modernize our energy grid, create well-paid jobs, and strengthen American leadership. Infrastructure has long been destiny when it comes to America’s economic success, and that will be especially true in the Intelligence Age.
At OpenAI, we’re committed to doing our part. Since launching our Stargate initiative almost one year ago, we’ve announced planned capacity that puts us well over halfway to meeting our 10-gigawatt commitment. These investments are already translating into good jobs and local economic growth in communities across the country. Over the coming years, we’ll build on this progress by strengthening the broader domestic AI supply chain and accelerating investment in U.S. manufacturing capabilities that support American AI leadership.
As part of that work, today we’re launching a new Request for Proposals(opens in a new window) (RFP) focused on U.S.-based manufacturing across key parts of the AI supply chain, including data center inputs, consumer electronics, and robotics. Our goal is to identify and enable domestic manufacturing capacity that can help shorten timelines, strengthen resilience, and extend technology leadership as AI infrastructure scales.
We’re seeking proposals from manufacturers, suppliers, and partners who are building – or are prepared to build – critical components and systems for the AI ecosystem in the United States, including:
- Modules, tooling and equipment, and final assembly for consumer electronics
- Manufacturing for compute, power, cooling, and supporting data center hardware
- Critical inputs for advanced robotics (e.g., gearboxes, motors, power electronics)
When people talk about AI infrastructure, the conversation often stops at chips and data centers. But advanced AI depends on a much broader ecosystem of physical components: the racks, cabling, networking gear, cooling systems, power systems, power electronics, electromechanical modules, and testing and assembly capacity are all required to bring it all online at scale. Our RFP aims to build on momentum that already exists by identifying where targeted partnerships, demand signals, and coordination can help unlock faster growth, larger scale, and more durable U.S. leadership in AI.
Responses to the RFP will help inform partnerships, procurement strategies, and infrastructure planning. We see this as part of a broader story of reindustrialization. Across the country, manufacturers are investing in advanced production capabilities to support the AI ecosystem – bringing new facilities online, modernizing supply chains, and expanding skilled workforces. These investments are critical to ensuring that the benefits of AI are created and shared here in the U.S..
We will review proposals on a rolling basis and follow up with selected respondents on next steps. The deadline to submit a proposal is June 2026.