- Google is spending $50 million to train 300,000 skilled workers in more than 20 US states.
- The funding comes from Google’s AI Opportunity Fund and is being positioned as a public-private partnership model to fulfill upcoming infrastructure-related work linked to the construction of data centers and networks.
- This is a small fraction of Google’s total AI skills-related spending of $1 billion on AI education and training at US universities.
Google is trying to solve a problem that could become a deciding factor in building the AI data center of the future: getting skilled labor to make it happen.
The company has revealed plans to invest an additional $50 million in skilled trades training covering up to 300,000 jobs in more than 20 states.
The plans mention electricians, plumbers, pipe fitters, welders, service technicians and sheet metal workers in particular, indicating that Google is grappling with and acting proactively to resolve what it sees as a labor shortage, at least temporarily, in upcoming AI data center builds.
Less than $166 per worker in training?
If the $50 million were invested entirely for the supposed 300,000 workers Google wants to train and add to the workforce, the sum comes down to a significantly low budget of $166 per person.
The amount awarded is money that Google can recover in less than three hours; The company effectively generated $18.4 million in hourly operating profits last quarter. Google’s hourly revenue according to its Q1 2026 presentation exceeds the grant it just awarded: $50.9 million.
Google has mentioned its initiative as one of many in what it calls a broad pro-worker push in its press release:
“No single entity can solve this American workforce shortage. There needs to be a commitment between industry, civil society and government so we can create modern on-the-job training and expand apprenticeships together.”
This indicates that the Silicon Valley-based giant is at least partially pursuing government-backed initiatives to address what it sees as a jobs crisis in the near future. To put it in context, Google has already committed $1 billion in AI spending commitments to universities, making this seem like a mere fraction of the total.
Considering how Google worded its announcement, stating that “more than” 300,000 workers would receive training, the actual spending per person is potentially even lower. At a time when the search engine giant is set to spend between $180 billion and $190 billion on AI-related capital expenditures by 2026, this seems even less than a proverbial drop in the ocean, given the scale of its ambitions.
One could argue that solving a looming jobs crisis isn’t exactly Google’s purview to begin with, but the optics of spending less than an hour of revenue on the “next generation of American workers” might not be ideal, even if done with considerable fanfare.
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