Pichai warns no company can dodge a downturn
Sundar Pichai cautions that every firm will feel the impact if the AI boom falters. He told a major British news outlet that today’s rapid AI investment marks an “extraordinary moment”, yet also shows signs of clear “irrationality”. He noted rising unease in Silicon Valley as company valuations jump and spending accelerates. Pichai said his company can withstand a slowdown but still shares the same risks. “I think no company is going to be immune, including us,” he said.
Interview reveals mounting pressure across the industry
Pichai addressed rising energy demands, slower climate progress, UK expansion, model accuracy and job disruption. His comments land at a critical moment for the AI market. Alphabet’s value doubled in seven months to $3.5tn as investors gained confidence in its ability to compete with OpenAI. Analysts also watch Alphabet’s effort to produce advanced AI superchips that challenge Nvidia, which recently reached a $5tn valuation.
Some analysts question the complex $1.4tn web of deals around OpenAI, which earns far less than the investment linked to its growth. Pichai said investment cycles often “overshoot”, echoing warnings from the dot-com period. He compared the current AI surge to the early internet, which saw heavy overinvestment but still reshaped the world.
Leaders across finance voice similar concerns
JP Morgan chief Jamie Dimon recently said AI spending will pay off but suggested that some of the huge funding flows will “probably be lost”. Pichai argued that Google’s full control of its technology stack — from chips to data to frontier research — places it in a stronger position to manage turbulence.
Alphabet expands its long-term UK strategy
Alphabet committed £5bn to UK infrastructure and research over the next two years. Pichai said the company will grow advanced research work in the UK, especially at DeepMind in London. He confirmed that Google will begin training AI models in the UK “over time”, a move supported by government leaders who aim to strengthen the nation’s global AI standing. “We are committed to investing in the UK in a pretty significant way,” he said.
AI’s power demand slows climate progress
Pichai warned of the “immense” energy needs of AI. Global AI systems consumed 1.5% of the world’s electricity last year. He said countries, including the UK, must expand energy supply and improve infrastructure. “You don’t want to constrain an economy based on energy, and that will have consequences,” he said.
He admitted that increasing energy use slows Alphabet’s climate goals, though the company still aims to reach net zero by 2030 through new energy technologies. “The rate at which we were hoping to make progress will be impacted,” he said.
AI reshapes work across every sector
Pichai called AI “the most profound technology” ever developed. He said society will experience disruption but also gain major opportunities. He expects many jobs to evolve and stressed that workers must adapt. Anyone who learns to use AI tools, from teachers to doctors, will advance faster. “Those who adapt will thrive,” he said.
