Kazakhstan signed a $10 billion strategic cooperation agreement with Firebird and Nvidia to build AI infrastructure anchored by a project called Data Center Valley in the country's northeast. The pact marks the largest announced AI compute investment in Central Asia and arrives as hyperscalers and sovereign wealth allocators search for jurisdictions outside primary U.S.-China spheres.
The agreement covers development of data center infrastructure, power access arrangements, and what both parties described as "strategic AI cooperation" without disclosing the construction timeline or equity structure. Firebird, an AI infrastructure developer with operations across emerging compute geographies, will lead project execution. Nvidia's involvement remains unspecified beyond technical partnership language, though the deal follows a pattern where the chipmaker provides architectural guidance without capital commitment. Kazakhstan's Ministry of Digital Development signed on behalf of the government, signaling policy-level coordination rather than purely commercial engagement.
This matters because compute geography is bifurcating faster than capital markets have priced. The U.S. and allied jurisdictions tightened AI chip export controls in October 2023, pushing frontier model builders and hyperscale operators to evaluate alternatives where power is cheap, land is available, and regulatory frameworks permit high-density GPU clusters. Kazakhstan offers sub-4¢/kWh industrial power rates in its northern regions, minimal data sovereignty restrictions, and a government willing to streamline permitting for projects at this scale. Data Center Valley appears designed to capture spillover demand from operators who cannot or will not build exclusively in Virginia, Singapore, or Frankfurt.
The $10 billion figure likely represents staged capital across five to seven years, not immediate deployment. Comparable projects in emerging compute markets typically follow a phased structure: initial $500 million to $1 billion for power infrastructure and site preparation, then modular data hall construction as anchor tenants commit. Firebird has not disclosed pre-committed capacity, which means the project remains speculative until hyperscalers or sovereign AI labs sign long-term lease agreements. Without named anchor tenants, the financing will either come from development finance institutions with geopolitical mandates or from family offices and sovereigns betting on compute scarcity driving lease rates above $200 per kilowatt per month within three years.
Operators should monitor three developments over the next six to nine months: first, whether AWS, Microsoft, or Google sign capacity commitments, which would validate commercial viability; second, whether Nvidia ships H100 or successor architecture chips to the site, which would confirm export license clearance; third, whether Kazakhstan's grid operator begins procuring the 800 to 1,200 megawatts of incremental power capacity required, likely from coal or future nuclear sources given the timeline.
The deal sits in a broader pattern where second-tier governments use AI infrastructure to negotiate geopolitical optionality. Kazakhstan plays both Moscow and Beijing while maintaining working relations with Washington, and a $10 billion compute project creates dependencies all three blocs want to influence.
The takeaway
Kazakhstan's **$10B** AI data center deal tests whether emerging compute geographies can capture hyperscaler demand outside U.S.-China spheres.
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