Anthropic is the latest major artificial intelligence laboratory to plan a presence in Singapore, following similar moves by rivals OpenAI and Google DeepMind.
Over the past two years, many firms have also set up AI centres of excellence in Singapore to promote the use of the technology in various sectors. There are more than 70 of such centres of excellence to date.
These add to a S$1 billion five-year national plan to boost AI research in public institutions.
The five-year plan, slated to last until 2030, will see the setup of research centres of excellence, which will complement the current network of more than 70 AI centres of excellence.
These centre openings are part of the National AI Strategy 2.0 to position Singapore as a global hub where real-world uses of AI are showcased. Here is a look at some key openings.
1. OpenAI
In May, ChatGPT creator OpenAI committed more than S$300 million to establish an Applied AI Lab in Singapore, its first outside the United States. The lab will focus on using AI in public services, finance, and healthcare sectors, and digital infrastructure here.
No timeframe was given for the S$300 million commitment.
It will also launch a forward-deployed engineer training programme as part of an agreement with the Ministry of Digital Development and Information to create more than 200 Singapore-based technical roles over the next few years.
A forward-deployed engineer is a hybrid business-technical role for software engineers. Such engineers work directly with companies on real-world business problems to solve pain points and unlock new sources of value.
2. NVIDIA
In May, the US-based chipmaker announced plans to set up its first research lab in Singapore, its second in the Asia-Pacific. The lab will focus on developing embodied AI, such as robots and autonomous vehicles. It will also focus on lowering computing costs and improving the energy efficiency of large-scale AI infrastructure.
NVIDIA’s lab is expected to be aligned with Singapore’s multi-operator robot testbed in the Punggol Digital District, where companies like Grab, DHL, and Certis are already testing robots for security, cleaning, and delivery.
3. Temus
In May, Temasek-backed digital services firm, Temus, established a local foundry to bridge the gap between AI experimentation and live production. It is hiring and training 50 AI professionals to work with companies here to accelerate enterprise AI adoption in fields such as precision health and financial services.
Some early projects include an agentic AI assistant for an investment company, and an AI-powered lead management system for a telecommunications provider.