Michael Burry, the investor who made his name betting against the housing bubble, thinks he's spotted the next crisis: America's power grid can't handle the AI revolution. And this time, his solution involves a trillion dollars and a whole lot of nuclear reactors.
On Friday, Burry took to X with an urgent message for President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance. He's calling for a $1 trillion federal investment to blanket the country with small nuclear reactors while simultaneously building what he describes as a modern, hardened national power grid. The goal? Move fast, cut through regulatory red tape, and get it done before energy shortages strangle American innovation.
Why Nuclear, and Why Now?
Burry framed this as nothing less than a strategic imperative. "This is the only hope of getting enough power to keep up with China," he wrote, arguing that abundant energy isn't just about keeping the lights on. It's about long-term national security and eventually managing the country's debt burden. Without it, he suggests, the U.S. risks falling behind in the global AI race.
The timing makes sense when you look at what's happening with electricity demand. Artificial intelligence is devouring power at an unprecedented rate, particularly through data centers and advanced manufacturing facilities. And the infrastructure to support all this simply isn't there yet.
Tech Leaders Sound the Alarm on Regulation
Burry's call resonated quickly with tech industry voices. Daniel Newman, CEO of Futurum Group, shared the post with his own blunt assessment of the situation.
"Four words about AI that I never planned to say: Michael Burry is right," Newman wrote. "Regulation is our single biggest bottleneck to achieving our lofty AI ambitions."
Newman pushed back against concerns about an AI bubble, insisting the demand is genuine and substantial. The problem isn't hype, it's infrastructure. "We cannot energize the data centers we will need … if we don't speed up the buildout of energy and remove the mass of regulation that slows 'breaking ground,'" he said.




