A Texas company cofounded by former U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry says it will build “the world’s largest Artificial Intelligence complex” in a “first-of-its-kind, behind-the-meter ‘HyperGrid’ campus” near Amarillo.
Working “in partnership” with the Texas Tech University System, the company said the campus will generate up to 11 gigawatts of electricity—enough to power 8.2 million homes, equivalent to New York City’s demand—fueled by “the largest nuclear power complex in America” supported by “the nation’s biggest combined-cycle natural gas project, solar power, and battery storage.”
NRC spokesman Scott Burnell on June 27 confirmed that “there is an application” from Fermi America for reactor development filed with the commission, but he did not give further details.
“The NRC is checking documents from Fermi America to ensure any protected information is appropriately withheld,” Burnell told The Epoch Times. “Once that check is completed, the agency will make the documents publicly available.”
“The Chinese are building 22 nuclear reactors today to power the future of AI,“ the former three-term Texas governor said. ”America has none. We’re behind, and it’s all hands on deck.”
While the United States is the world’s largest generator and consumer of nuclear energy with 94 nuclear reactors in 55 power plants, most were built between 1970 and 1990. The most recent time a new reactor came online was in 2016.
Nuclear power is regarded as the key to generating the electricity needed to power the AI data centers emerging as infrastructure cornerstones in a rapidly digitalizing world.
Using nuclear energy to power data centers “demands that American innovators rise to the occasion,” Perry said.
“No one does energy better than Texas, and Fermi America and the Texas Tech University System are answering the call,” he said.
Powering the project “behind-the-meter,” meaning not hooked into public utility grids, is imperative, Fermi America said.
“The world’s largest AI companies can no longer rely on the grid and traditional sources for the power they need, creating a global crisis,” it said. “Ultimately, this has forced America into a dog fight with China—and the winner will control the future of artificial intelligence.”
And that will require “next-generation electric grids that deliver highly redundant power at gigawatt scale,” Fermi America said, outlining three tiers of energy it will integrate into its project.
While developing its on-site reactors, which even under accelerated timelines could take years, Fermi America maintains it will use nuclear power.
The nearby Pantex Plant, where the National Nuclear Security Administration has manufactured and disassembled nuclear weapons for the Department of Defense since 1951, is the likely source.
The siting of the project near the Pantex Plant and its commitment to eventually develop its own “behind-the-meter” nuclear power “underscores Fermi America’s strategic position to build clean, safe, new nuclear power for America’s next-generation AI,” according to the company.
The third tier of the data center complex’s “HyperGrid” will be solar power and battery storage. In architectural renderings of the project, the campus is framed by sprawling fields of solar panels. Texas is the nation’s second-leading generator of solar power, behind only California.
Fermi America’s plan to build “an advanced energy and intelligence campus in Amarillo marks a pivotal moment for the Texas Panhandle and for the United States,” Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Texas) said, adding it will “place America firmly at the forefront of the global AI race against the Chinese Communist Party.”







