Mar 22, 2025; Philadelphia, PA, USA; President Donald Trump and US Senator Dave McCormick during the Division I Men's Wrestling Championship held at Wells Fargo Center. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images
At the Pennsylvania Energy & Innovation Summit at Carnegie Mellon University on Tuesday, President Donald Trump and U.S. Sen. Dave McCormick (R‑Pa.) announced more than $90 billion in private-sector commitments to develop AI infrastructure, data centers, power generation, and workforce training across the commonwealth.
The summit brought together major technology and energy players — Meta, Microsoft, Google, AWS, ExxonMobil, Blackstone, CoreWeave, Brookfield, Westinghouse, and others — to pledge massive expansion in everything from natural gas and nuclear power to regional data hubs.
Summit speakers emphasized the power demands of AI, arguing that coal, gas, nuclear, and hydropower must underpin the rapid development of data centers. Renewable energy and wind/solar were notably minimized in the agenda.
Microsoft’s collaboration with Constellation Energy to potentially reopen the Three Mile Island nuclear plant underscores this shift.
Summit panelists revealed a push to build a modern workforce — announcing a regional energy/AI training center in Pittsburgh, a $2 million cybersecurity education gift from Anthropic for schools and Carnegie Mellon, and remarks from Mike Rowe highlighting that trades like HVAC, welding, and piping are vital job pipelines alongside AI coding.
This initiative is branded as the “next industrial revolution,” reflecting concerns over U.S. leadership and competition with China.
Trump called it a “true golden age for America,” though many investments had been announced prior to the summit—raising questions about how much of the $90B count as fresh commitments.
Environmental groups criticized the focus on fossil and nuclear energy while warning about climate and health impacts; critics also note the limited creation of permanent jobs compared to construction-phase hiring.
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro stayed neutral, urging accountability for delivering real projects and jobs, while Sen. McCormick emphasized the opportunity to leverage the state’s shale, nuclear capacity, and talent.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick called for streamlining energy and data-center permitting, criticizing delays that hamper buildup.
An AI Action Plan from the Trump administration is due by July 23, with expectations of more executive orders aimed at easing permitting and freeing up federal land for data center construction.
Observers will closely watch whether these investments translate into realized projects, how energy infrastructure adapts, and how communities handle environmental and grid stability concerns.