
On December 18, 2025, the U.S. Department of Energy announced collaboration agreements with 24 organizations, including OpenAI, Nvidia, Microsoft, Anthropic and xAI, to support its AI-driven Genesis Mission platform. Multiple partners such as Cerebras Systems, Accenture Federal Services and Armada separately signed MOUs with DOE to provide AI compute, software and services for the initiative.
This article aggregates reporting from 6 news sources. The TL;DR is AI-generated from original reporting. Race to AGI's analysis provides editorial context on implications for AGI development.
Genesis Mission is the clearest articulation yet of a state-backed “AI Manhattan Project” for science. DOE is not just buying GPUs; it’s building a national discovery platform that connects supercomputers, labs, datasets and frontier models from players like OpenAI, Nvidia, Microsoft and Anthropic into one coordinated stack.([energy.gov](https://www.energy.gov/articles/energy-department-announces-collaboration-agreements-24-organizations-advance-genesis?utm_source=openai)) The fact that 24 organizations have already signed on — and that many are also announcing bilateral MOUs with DOE — signals a new phase where government becomes a central orchestrator of frontier AI deployment, not just a regulator.([cerebras.ai](https://www.cerebras.ai/press-release/cerebras-systems-and-u-s-department-of-energy-sign-mou-to-accelerate-the-genesis-mission-and-u-s?utm_source=openai))
Strategically, this is about compressing scientific timelines. If Genesis really does double U.S. R&D productivity over a decade, as DOE suggests, it will massively accelerate the feedback loop between AI, simulation, experimentation and real-world deployment in areas like fusion, materials and national security. For the race to AGI, that means two things: first, a reliable demand driver for ever-larger, more capable models tuned for scientific reasoning; second, a testbed where those models are embedded in high-stakes, closed-loop systems. That combination — frontier models plus privileged data and unique instruments — is exactly where emergent capabilities and unknown failure modes are most likely to show up first.
Preliminary talks for a potential funding round of up to $100 billion that would value OpenAI around $750 billion.
Disney granted OpenAI’s Sora a one‑year exclusive license to use over 200 Disney, Marvel, Pixar and Star Wars characters for user‑generated AI video content as part of a broader three‑year partnership.
Nvidia acquired SchedMD, developer of the open-source Slurm workload manager, as part of a broader push to expand its open-source AI software and model stack with Nemotron 3.
BBVA and OpenAI formed a strategic partnership to co‑develop AI‑powered banking experiences and deploy ChatGPT Enterprise to BBVA’s global workforce.
Amazon and Microsoft together committed over $52 billion to expand AI‑powered infrastructure, tools and workforce programs in India by 2030.


