Anthropic has secured a $19 billion, 20-year data centre agreement with TeraWulf, a domestic power and digital infrastructure company, covering 401 megawatts of dedicated AI compute capacity at a facility in Kentucky. The agreement, confirmed this week, is one of the largest long-term compute contracts in the history of the AI industry and represents Anthropic’s most significant single infrastructure commitment as it prepares for a potential initial public offering anticipated for late 2026 or early 2027.
The Scale of the Commitment
A 401-megawatt compute facility is an extraordinarily large infrastructure stake for an AI laboratory to commit to through a single long-term agreement. For context, a data centre drawing 400 megawatts is roughly equivalent to powering a city of 300,000 households. At AI accelerator density and power draw rates, that capacity translates into many tens of thousands of Nvidia H100 or Vera Rubin GPU equivalents operating simultaneously — infrastructure sufficient to train and serve frontier AI models at a scale that Anthropic currently uses distributed cloud compute to approximate.
The 20-year term of the agreement is equally significant. Revenue for TeraWulf begins in the second half of 2027, and the multi-decade lock-in gives Anthropic both planning certainty and preferential pricing that would be unavailable on shorter-term contracts. The deal mirrors the structure Anthropic observed as SpaceX established with xAI’s Colossus facility — and which Google and others subsequently replicated — where long-term lease agreements rather than traditional cloud procurement secure the physical compute capacity needed to remain competitive at the frontier.
Why This Matters Ahead of an IPO
Anthropic’s anticipated IPO, with active discussions reportedly involving Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and Morgan Stanley, is expected to seek a valuation reflecting the company’s position as the only major frontier AI lab currently operating at a projected quarterly profit. The $19 billion infrastructure commitment is a critical data point for the public market narrative: it demonstrates that Anthropic is not simply a model developer dependent on hyperscaler goodwill for compute, but is building the physical infrastructure autonomously necessary to remain at the frontier for decades.
Investors evaluating AI lab IPOs in 2026 have consistently rewarded companies that can demonstrate long-term infrastructure self-sufficiency — as the Cerebras debut in May demonstrated when its wafer-scale compute independence was cited as a key differentiator attracting investor enthusiasm at a $95 billion first-day market cap.
Implications for the AI Infrastructure Ecosystem
The TeraWulf agreement also signals a consolidation of the AI power-and-compute infrastructure market around long-term lease structures that favour dedicated facilities over shared cloud. For enterprise data science teams that depend on Anthropic’s API to power production AI applications, the Kentucky facility eventually becoming operational represents a meaningful improvement in the cost structure and capacity available to support those workloads, with potential downstream benefits to API pricing and capacity availability.








