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Microsoft deepens
commitment to Australia with A$25 billion investment in
AI infrastructure, security, and skills
Microsoft Chairman and CEO Satya
Nadella with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese
at Kirribilli House
Largest-ever company investment in
Australia will expand in-country computing and AI
capacity by the end of 2029
Commitment to Government’s
Expectations for Data Centres and AI Infrastructure
Developers
Strengthening Australia’s national
defence by expanding Microsoft-ASD Cyber-Shield to
critical government agencies and deepening collaboration
with Home Affairs
Australia’s largest-ever AI
skilling commitment to provide three million Australians
workforce-ready AI skills by 2028
Enhancing safe and responsible AI
through collaboration with Australian AI Safety
Institute and industry-first dialogue with workers
By the end of 2029, the company
will invest A$25 billion (USD 18 billion) in new digital
infrastructure, alongside new commitments to national
cyber defence capability and workforce skilling
programs. This commitment will significantly expand
Microsoft’s Azure AI supercomputing and cloud
infrastructure in Australia, see Microsoft collaborate
with the Australian AI Safety Institute, expand the
Microsoft-ASD Cyber-Shield to additional government
agencies, deepen collaboration on national resilience
with the Department of Home Affairs, and equip three
million Australians with workforce-ready AI skills.
These announcements come as Nadella visits Australia for
the Sydney stop of Microsoft’s global AI Tour.
“We want to make sure all
Australians benefit from AI. Our National AI Plan is all
about capturing the economic opportunities of this
transformative technology while protecting Australians
from the risks,” said Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
“Microsoft’s long-term investment in our national
capability will help deliver on that plan –
strengthening our cyber defences and creating
opportunity for Australian workers and businesses.”
“Australia has an enormous
opportunity to translate AI into real economic growth
and societal benefit,” said Satya Nadella, Chairman and
CEO, Microsoft. “That is why we are making our largest
investment in Australia to date, committing A$25 billion
to expand AI and cloud capacity, strengthen
cybersecurity, and expand access to digital skills
across the country.”
These initiatives are designed to
help Australia seize its opportunity to become a world
leader in AI-driven innovation and ensure the nation
leads in the safe, inclusive uptake of AI across all
industries, aligned to the Government’s National AI
Plan. Today’s commitment builds on a A$5 billion
investment from October 2023 that saw Microsoft grow its
Australian datacentre presence to 29 sites across three
Azure regions, the establishment of the Microsoft-ASD
Cyber-Shield, and provided more than one million
Australians with digital and AI skills. New analysis
from EY-Parthenon estimates that across the 2025
financial year, Microsoft was responsible for $36
billion in local economic contribution and sustained the
equivalent of more than 186,000 full-time jobs.
Investing A$25 billion in
Australian digital infrastructure
A$25 billion in capital and
operational expenditure by the end of 2029 will
significantly expand Microsoft’s Azure AI infrastructure
across Australia, enhancing local AI supercomputing
capacity and deploying advanced AI processors to support
the next generation of AI innovation, data, and
applications. Microsoft will see increased growth across
Commercial Cloud and AI/GPU offerings for customers in
our Australian cloud regions, with plans underway to
expand our existing footprint by more than 140 percent
by the end of 2029. The investment further boosts the
in-country cloud and AI capacity, resilience and
security that Australian organisations need to operate
with confidence.
This investment is underpinned by a
Memorandum of Understanding with the Australian
Government, affirming Microsoft’s commitment to the
Government’s recently released expectations of
datacentres and AI infrastructure developers. These
expectations are built around five national priorities:
supporting Australia’s national interest, driving the
clean energy transition, using water sustainably,
investing in Australian skills and jobs and
strengthening local research and innovation capability.
Microsoft’s commitments – from our achievement of 100
percent renewable energy to match our energy consumption
and water-positive operations by 2030, to local job
creation and continuing to provide a powerful
cloud-based development platform and access programs for
Australian startups – are designed to reflect the values
Australians expect of infrastructure at national scale.
Microsoft ANZ President Jane
Livesey and Minister Tim Ayres sign a Memorandum of
Understanding between Microsoft and the Australian
Government, joined by John Galligan and Assistant
Minister Andrew Charlton
To ensure AI infrastructure growth
is safe as well as sovereign, Microsoft will also be
collaborating with the newly established Australian AI
Safety Institute. Microsoft will support the Institute’s
mandate to monitor, test and evaluate advanced AI
systems, including collaboration on human-AI interaction
risks in companion chatbots and conversational AI
systems, while reinforcing Microsoft’s commitment to
responsible AI deployment across the Australian economy.
Strengthening Australia’s national
cyber security
Microsoft is building on the
Microsoft–Australian Signals Directorate Cyber Shield
(MACS) partnership established in 2023 and will expand
its collaboration with the ASD, Home Affairs and the
Digital Transformation Agency to protect Australia’s
most critical government systems and infrastructure.
Microsoft’s investment in MACS will be extended to cover
additional federal agencies, delivering improved
security configuration and threat visibility across the
government’s existing Microsoft technology investment.
Since inception, the MACS program has already secured
more than 38,000 government accounts, identified 35
previously unknown vulnerabilities, and delivered a
bespoke engineering solution with Microsoft Sentinel,
allowing customers to more easily integrate into the
Government’s Cyber Threat Intelligence Sharing program.
Australia’s cyber resilience
depends on more than technology; it requires deep,
sustained partnership between government and industry.
Today, Microsoft and the Federal Government have agreed
to collaborate to support Australia’s digital economic
resilience and national security. With the Department of
Home Affairs, they will create a shared approach to
trusted private public cooperation to strengthen
Australia’s national and economic resilience. Priority
areas for engagement will include connectivity, data
centre and hyperscale cloud infrastructure resilience.
Training three million Australians
with workforce-ready skills
Microsoft will train three million
Australians with workforce-ready AI skills by 2028 – the
largest commitment of its kind ever made in Australia.
The commitment builds on the company’s previous goal to
skill one million people across Australia and New
Zealand by the end of 2025, which was achieved ahead of
time, and underscores the urgency and demand for these
skills as AI reshapes every industry and every role.
In classrooms, Microsoft Elevate
for Educators launches today in Australia: a free
program helping teachers and school leaders build
confidence using AI responsibly. A new partnership with
youth platform Anyway (formerly Year13) will bring a
free AI-powered Career Coach to up to 1,000 Australian
schools, giving students personalised guidance at the
exact moment they’re making high-stakes decisions about
their futures.
To strengthen nonprofit leadership
with responsible AI, Microsoft Elevate for Changemakers
is also launching today to support nonprofit and social
impact leaders driving practical AI adoption in service
of their communities. Designed to meet organisations
where they are, the program builds hands-on skills
through free AI readiness credentials, while
strengthening internal capability so AI can be used
safely, effectively and in line with community
expectations.
These skilling commitments follow a
landmark AI Workers’ Summit, convened this week by
Microsoft and the Australian Council of Trade Unions – a
first-of-its-kind dialogue between the technology sector
and Australia’s union leadership about practical,
worker-centred AI diffusion.
Additional quotes:
Jane Livesey, President of
Microsoft Australia and New Zealand: “Microsoft is
committed to helping deliver Australia’s National AI
Plan with this historic investment in digital
infrastructure, cyber resilience and workforce-ready AI
skills. As organisations across government and industry
navigate one of the biggest technology shifts of our
generation, our focus is simple: building the trusted
capability and ecosystem Australia needs to innovate
confidently, compete globally, and ensure the benefits
of AI are shared widely and equitably.”
Bran Black, Chief Executive of
Business Council Australia: “This is a global
game-changer for Australia and exactly the kind of
investment we need to capture the economic opportunity
of the AI era. Microsoft’s $25 billion commitment to
infrastructure and cyber security will support jobs,
lift productivity and contribute to long-term economic
growth. This shows how Australia can be a leader in AI
and the scale of the economic opportunity that comes
with it.”
Lucinda Longcroft, Interim CEO,
Director of Policy and Government Affairs, Tech Council
of Australia: “This is a strong endorsement of
Australia’s role in the global technology ecosystem,
today and into the future. Investment and collaboration
of this scale around digital infrastructure, digital
skills, and digital security will help drive the
integration, adoption and innovation of AI to deliver
national benefit.”
Belinda Dennett, Chief Executive
Officer, Data Centres Australia: “Microsoft’s commitment
to Australia has been evident over more than 40 years
and this takes it to a new level. This investment in new
digital infrastructure provides Australia with the
opportunity to benefit from and to lead in the most
profound technological shift we have ever seen. It will
enable digital services for Australians and capture more
of the AI value chain locally, supporting high skilled
jobs and playing an important role in the energy
transition. This is a significant vote of confidence in
Australia as a hub for AI infrastructure investment and
data centre development.”
Microsoft Chairman and CEO Satya
Nadella with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese
at Kirribilli House
Today alongside Prime Minister
Anthony Albanese, Microsoft Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer Satya Nadella announced Microsoft’s largest-ever
investment in Australia. By the end of 2029, the company
will invest A$25 billion (USD 18 billion) in new digital
infrastructure, alongside new commitments to national
cyber defence capability and workforce skilling
programs. This commitment will significantly expand
Microsoft’s Azure AI supercomputing and cloud
infrastructure in Australia, see Microsoft collaborate
with the Australian AI Safety Institute, expand the
Microsoft-ASD Cyber-Shield to additional government
agencies, deepen collaboration on national resilience
with the Department of Home Affairs, and equip three
million Australians with workforce-ready AI skills.
These announcements come as Nadella visits Australia for
the Sydney stop of Microsoft’s global AI Tour.
“We want to make sure all
Australians benefit from AI. Our National AI Plan is all
about capturing the economic opportunities of this
transformative technology while protecting Australians
from the risks,” said Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
“Microsoft’s long-term investment in our national
capability will help deliver on that plan –
strengthening our cyber defences and creating
opportunity for Australian workers and businesses.”
“Australia has an enormous
opportunity to translate AI into real economic growth
and societal benefit,” said Satya Nadella, Chairman and
CEO, Microsoft. “That is why we are making our largest
investment in Australia to date, committing A$25 billion
to expand AI and cloud capacity, strengthen
cybersecurity, and expand access to digital skills
across the country.”
These initiatives are designed to
help Australia seize its opportunity to become a world
leader in AI-driven innovation and ensure the nation
leads in the safe, inclusive uptake of AI across all
industries, aligned to the Government’s National AI
Plan. Today’s commitment builds on a A$5 billion
investment from October 2023 that saw Microsoft grow its
Australian datacentre presence to 29 sites across three
Azure regions, the establishment of the Microsoft-ASD
Cyber-Shield, and provided more than one million
Australians with digital and AI skills. New analysis
from EY-Parthenon estimates that across the 2025
financial year, Microsoft was responsible for $36
billion in local economic contribution and sustained the
equivalent of more than 186,000 full-time jobs.
Investing A$25 billion in
Australian digital infrastructure
A$25 billion in capital and
operational expenditure by the end of 2029 will
significantly expand Microsoft’s Azure AI infrastructure
across Australia, enhancing local AI supercomputing
capacity and deploying advanced AI processors to support
the next generation of AI innovation, data, and
applications. Microsoft will see increased growth across
Commercial Cloud and AI/GPU offerings for customers in
our Australian cloud regions, with plans underway to
expand our existing footprint by more than 140 percent
by the end of 2029. The investment further boosts the
in-country cloud and AI capacity, resilience and
security that Australian organisations need to operate
with confidence.
This investment is underpinned by a
Memorandum of Understanding with the Australian
Government, affirming Microsoft’s commitment to the
Government’s recently released expectations of
datacentres and AI infrastructure developers. These
expectations are built around five national priorities:
supporting Australia’s national interest, driving the
clean energy transition, using water sustainably,
investing in Australian skills and jobs and
strengthening local research and innovation capability.
Microsoft’s commitments – from our achievement of 100
percent renewable energy to match our energy consumption
and water-positive operations by 2030, to local job
creation and continuing to provide a powerful
cloud-based development platform and access programs for
Australian startups – are designed to reflect the values
Australians expect of infrastructure at national scale.
Microsoft ANZ President Jane
Livesey and Minister Tim Ayres sign a Memorandum of
Understanding between Microsoft and the Australian
Government, joined by John Galligan and Assistant
Minister Andrew Charlton
To ensure AI infrastructure growth
is safe as well as sovereign, Microsoft will also be
collaborating with the newly established Australian AI
Safety Institute. Microsoft will support the Institute’s
mandate to monitor, test and evaluate advanced AI
systems, including collaboration on human-AI interaction
risks in companion chatbots and conversational AI
systems, while reinforcing Microsoft’s commitment to
responsible AI deployment across the Australian economy.
Strengthening Australia’s national
cyber security
Microsoft is building on the
Microsoft–Australian Signals Directorate Cyber Shield
(MACS) partnership established in 2023 and will expand
its collaboration with the ASD, Home Affairs and the
Digital Transformation Agency to protect Australia’s
most critical government systems and infrastructure.
Microsoft’s investment in MACS will be extended to cover
additional federal agencies, delivering improved
security configuration and threat visibility across the
government’s existing Microsoft technology investment.
Since inception, the MACS program has already secured
more than 38,000 government accounts, identified 35
previously unknown vulnerabilities, and delivered a
bespoke engineering solution with Microsoft Sentinel,
allowing customers to more easily integrate into the
Government’s Cyber Threat Intelligence Sharing program.
Australia’s cyber resilience
depends on more than technology; it requires deep,
sustained partnership between government and industry.
Today, Microsoft and the Federal Government have agreed
to collaborate to support Australia’s digital economic
resilience and national security. With the Department of
Home Affairs, they will create a shared approach to
trusted private public cooperation to strengthen
Australia’s national and economic resilience. Priority
areas for engagement will include connectivity, data
centre and hyperscale cloud infrastructure resilience.
Training three million Australians
with workforce-ready skills
Microsoft will train three million
Australians with workforce-ready AI skills by 2028 – the
largest commitment of its kind ever made in Australia.
The commitment builds on the company’s previous goal to
skill one million people across Australia and New
Zealand by the end of 2025, which was achieved ahead of
time, and underscores the urgency and demand for these
skills as AI reshapes every industry and every role.
In classrooms, Microsoft Elevate
for Educators launches today in Australia: a free
program helping teachers and school leaders build
confidence using AI responsibly. A new partnership with
youth platform Anyway (formerly Year13) will bring a
free AI-powered Career Coach to up to 1,000 Australian
schools, giving students personalised guidance at the
exact moment they’re making high-stakes decisions about
their futures.
To strengthen nonprofit leadership
with responsible AI, Microsoft Elevate for Changemakers
is also launching today to support nonprofit and social
impact leaders driving practical AI adoption in service
of their communities. Designed to meet organisations
where they are, the program builds hands-on skills
through free AI readiness credentials, while
strengthening internal capability so AI can be used
safely, effectively and in line with community
expectations.
These skilling commitments follow a
landmark AI Workers’ Summit, convened this week by
Microsoft and the Australian Council of Trade Unions – a
first-of-its-kind dialogue between the technology sector
and Australia’s union leadership about practical,
worker-centred AI diffusion.
Additional quotes:
Jane Livesey, President of
Microsoft Australia and New Zealand: “Microsoft is
committed to helping deliver Australia’s National AI
Plan with this historic investment in digital
infrastructure, cyber resilience and workforce-ready AI
skills. As organisations across government and industry
navigate one of the biggest technology shifts of our
generation, our focus is simple: building the trusted
capability and ecosystem Australia needs to innovate
confidently, compete globally, and ensure the benefits
of AI are shared widely and equitably.”
Bran Black, Chief Executive of
Business Council Australia: “This is a global
game-changer for Australia and exactly the kind of
investment we need to capture the economic opportunity
of the AI era. Microsoft’s $25 billion commitment to
infrastructure and cyber security will support jobs,
lift productivity and contribute to long-term economic
growth. This shows how Australia can be a leader in AI
and the scale of the economic opportunity that comes
with it.”
Lucinda Longcroft, Interim CEO,
Director of Policy and Government Affairs, Tech Council
of Australia: “This is a strong endorsement of
Australia’s role in the global technology ecosystem,
today and into the future. Investment and collaboration
of this scale around digital infrastructure, digital
skills, and digital security will help drive the
integration, adoption and innovation of AI to deliver
national benefit.”
Belinda Dennett, Chief Executive
Officer, Data Centres Australia: “Microsoft’s commitment
to Australia has been evident over more than 40 years
and this takes it to a new level. This investment in new
digital infrastructure provides Australia with the
opportunity to benefit from and to lead in the most
profound technological shift we have ever seen. It will
enable digital services for Australians and capture more
of the AI value chain locally, supporting high skilled
jobs and playing an important role in the energy
transition. This is a significant vote of confidence in
Australia as a hub for AI infrastructure investment and
data centre development.”
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