Mar 31, 2026 12:17
Oracle expands AI infrastructure for U.S. government customers with NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra GPUs and xAI Grok models in secure cloud regions.
Oracle is bringing NVIDIA’s latest B300 GPUs and xAI’s Grok models to its government cloud regions, giving federal agencies access to cutting-edge AI hardware previously limited to commercial customers. The expansion, announced March 31, 2026, targets agencies running demanding inference workloads under strict security requirements.
The NVIDIA B300, powered by Blackwell Ultra architecture, represents the company’s newest generation of AI accelerators. Oracle says the DGX B300 systems will help government customers train and run large language models more efficiently, with improved performance per watt compared to previous generations.
Model Options Expand Beyond Hardware
Beyond raw compute, Oracle plans to offer xAI’s Grok 4 and Grok 4 Fast models alongside NVIDIA Nemotron in government regions. The company positions these for specific use cases: Grok excels at data extraction, code generation, and text summarization, while Nemotron’s throughput advantages suit agentic AI applications requiring fast response times.
Federal customers currently have limited options for deploying frontier AI models in compliant environments. Most commercial AI services don’t meet FedRAMP High or DISA Impact Level requirements that govern sensitive government workloads.
Part of Broader Government Push
The announcement lands alongside two related Oracle moves. The company also launched an isolated cloud specifically for defense contractors and unveiled a separate AI data platform targeting federal agencies—all on the same day.
Oracle’s government cloud regions already hold FedRAMP High, DISA IL4, IL5, and IL6 authorizations. The company operates physically separated infrastructure from its commercial regions, a requirement for handling classified and controlled unclassified information.
Current government cloud customers can already deploy AI applications using NVIDIA AI Enterprise software, including NIM microservices and NeMo training tools. The B300 expansion adds hardware muscle to that existing software stack.
What This Means for Government AI Adoption
Agencies have struggled to keep pace with private sector AI adoption, largely due to compliance overhead and limited authorized options. Oracle’s pitch: bring commercial-grade AI capabilities into environments that meet government security requirements without forcing agencies to build custom infrastructure.
The company didn’t specify exact availability dates, noting the infrastructure and model options depend on “service readiness and regional infrastructure availability.” Government procurement cycles typically add months to deployment timelines regardless of vendor readiness.
For Oracle, the expansion strengthens its position in a government cloud market where it competes against AWS GovCloud, Microsoft Azure Government, and Google Cloud’s public sector offerings. The company has emphasized consistent pricing between commercial and government regions—a differentiator when agencies compare total costs.
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