Samsung, SK Hynix set to supply chips to OpenAI's Stargate project
A Samsung logo is displayed in a supermarket in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, October 29, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic
SEOUL :Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix have signed letters of intent to supply memory chips for OpenAI's data centers, as South Korean chipmakers join forces with the ChatGPT maker to meet rising demand from its Stargate project.
OpenAI will also work with the two South Korean firms on building two data centers, a Korean-style Stargate, leveraging Seoul's ambition to become an AI hub in Asia and the country's large number of paying ChatGPT subscribers - second only to that of the United States.
The announcements were made on Wednesday after OpenAI CEO Sam Altman met South Korean President Lee Jae Myung and the chairmen of Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix at the presidential office in central Seoul.
U.S. President Donald Trump unveiled the $500 billion Stargate project in January, charging OpenAI and partners including SoftBank and Oracle with ensuring the U.S. remains a leader in artificial intelligence.
Expanding chip availability was one of the key ideas of the project, and Nvidia said last week it would invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI and supply it with data center chips.
PLAN TO BUILD TWO DATA CENTERS IN SOUTH KOREA
South Korea's top presidential adviser, Kim Yong-beom, said OpenAI was seeking to order 900,000 semiconductor wafers in 2029, and planned to set up joint ventures with Samsung and SK Hynix to build two data centers in South Korea with an initial capacity of 20 megawatts.
The adviser said South Korea was open to participating in financing for the Stargate project if needed.
“The significant part of the Stargate project would be impossible without memory chips from the two companies,” Kim told a press briefing.
The president's office said the partnership would give South Korean chipmakers an early foothold in the world's largest AI infrastructure project, providing a growth opportunity for the domestic chip industry.
"We're very excited to get to build Stargate Korea and data centers with our wonderful partners to support the sovereign AI needs of Korea," Altman said in a meeting with President Lee.
"Korea has an industrial base like nowhere else in the world that is critical for the development of AI. And so to get to work with such wonderful partners, Samsung and Hynix in many, many ways, but really starting with memory and the needs for that to serve the whole world's demand for AI," Altman added.
The presidential office said Google has been in talks with two to three South Korean companies on AI partnership, while SK Group in June announced a 7 trillion won investment, including $4 billion from Amazon Web Services, Amazon's cloud service provider, to build a data centre in South Korea.
Samsung and SK Hynix together hold about 70 per cent of the global Dynamic Random Access Memory chip market and nearly 80 per cent of the HBM market.
HBM - a type of DRAM standard first produced in 2013 - involves stacking chips vertically to save space and reduce power consumption, helping to process the large volumes of data generated by complex AI applications.
Analysts estimated that 900,000 wafers of advanced DRAM chips would be worth more than 100 trillion won ($70 billion) though the figure could vary with memory market cycles.
OpenAI this year set up its first office in Seoul as South Korean demand for its ChatGPT service surged.
Despite widespread expectations that AI will fundamentally change the world, investors have voiced substantial concern about a potential bubble from building too quickly.
The Stargate project has been delayed by longer-than-expected negotiations with other parties and decisions over sites, SoftBank's CFO said in August.
Alongside the chip supply agreements, Samsung Electronics' affiliate Samsung SDS signed a partnership with OpenAI to develop, build and operate AI data centers under the Stargate project, while also expanding enterprise AI services.
Shipbuilder Samsung Heavy Industries and construction unit Samsung C&T will jointly work with OpenAI to develop floating offshore data centers to cut cooling costs and carbon emissions.
($1 = 1,404.7600 won)