OpenAI’s Altman Pushes for Expanded Chips Act Tax Credit to Fuel AI Growth
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has intensified calls for the U.S. government to expand Chips Act tax credits, arguing this is crucial for America to maintain its global AI leadership position.
Key Takeaways
- OpenAI seeks expanded Chips Act tax credits for AI infrastructure
- Company proposes including AI servers, data centers, and grid components
- Altman emphasizes this differs from seeking federal loan guarantees
- OpenAI plans $1.4 trillion computational investment over eight years
Detailed Push for Expanded Credits
The initiative follows a formal letter sent on October 27 by OpenAI’s Chief Global Affairs Officer Chris Lehane to White House Science and Technology Policy Director Michael Kratsios. The letter specifically requests extending eligibility for the Advanced Manufacturing Investment Credit (AMIC) to cover AI server production, AI data centers, and essential grid components.
The AMIC is a federal tax incentive originally designed to boost domestic semiconductor manufacturing. Altman argues that broader application would benefit multiple industries.
“We think U.S. re-industrialization across the entire stack — fabs, turbines, transformers, steel, and much more — will help everyone in our industry, and other industries (including us),” Altman stated in a social media post.
Distinction from Loan Guarantees
Altman clarified that seeking expanded tax credits is “super different than loan guarantees to OpenAI.” While the company has discussed federal loan guarantees for chip factory construction with U.S. officials, these discussions specifically excluded data center funding.
The clarification comes amid OpenAI’s massive $1.4 trillion commitment to building computational resources over the next eight years, reflecting the enormous infrastructure demands of advanced AI systems.
Industry-Wide Impact
The push occurs as booming demand for AI models and products, including OpenAI’s ChatGPT, has triggered ambitious data center and advanced chip development plans across the technology sector.
However, White House AI and crypto czar David Sacks has previously indicated there would be no federal bailout for AI companies, setting important context for these policy discussions.



