REDWOOD CITY, Calif., July 17 — GoodVision AI (“GoodVision”), a developer of next-generation AI compute infrastructure purpose-built for inference, today announced the establishment of its first next-generation AI Factory in Japan following the signing of a strategic cooperation agreement with AI Storm Co., Ltd. (Tokyo Stock Exchange: 3719) (“AI Storm”), a Japan-based business and IT consulting company, to jointly develop, deploy, and commercialize high-performance AI infrastructure in Japan.

AI Factory Japan Project Overview

The partnership establishes GoodVision’s foothold in Japan’s rapidly expanding AI infrastructure market, beginning with a flagship AI Factory in Fukushima.

The initial phase of the project will consist of a 2-megawatt (“MW”) liquid-cooled deployment supporting a cluster of 72 NVIDIA B300 servers with more than 500 GPUs, delivering high-density, enterprise-grade AI inference capacity, with the facility expected to be completed and operational within three months.

Through the initial project, GoodVision anticipates establishing a replicable commercial model for larger-scale AI Factory buildouts in Japan and other international markets.

Combining GoodVision’s leading AI infrastructure integration capabilities with AI Storm’s local market presence and enterprise service expertise, the partners plan to expand AI Factory capacity across Japan, with the Fukushima site serving as a flagship deployment and a core node in GoodVision’s global network and infrastructure expansion strategy.

GoodVision’s AI Factory platform delivers vertically integrated AI infrastructure solutions spanning GPU system integration, power provisioning, advanced liquid cooling, and ongoing operations. Its containerized architecture enables rapid deployment, capital-efficient scaling, and optimized performance for large-scale AI workloads. Additionally, GoodVision will connect its Smart Routing Engine software solution to AI Factory operations, optimizing AI workflows across available models and computing resources to balance performance, latency, cost, and data requirements.

Highly Competitive Scale Planning (100 MW)

The project is designed around a long-term expansion roadmap targeting a total installed AI compute capacity of 100 MW within the next three years. The deployment strategy follows a phased, capital-efficient model, beginning with the Fukushima flagship AI Factory and expanding through a network of strategically located edge AI Factory facilities across Japan. This modular approach enables GoodVision to scale capacity in alignment with customer demand, power availability, and infrastructure readiness, while reducing execution risk and accelerating time to market.

Specifically, the scaling roadmap is as follows:

  • Phase 1 (Within 3 Months): Complete and bring online the initial 2 MW Fukushima flagship AI Factory, establishing the foundation for GoodVision’s AI inference infrastructure network in Japan.
  • Phase 2 (Within 12 Months): Reach 20 MW of total installed AI compute capacity across Japan building on the successful deployment and operation of the initial Fukushima facility.
  • Phase 3 (Within 3 Years): Expand GoodVision’s AI Factory network across Japan to achieve a planned total capacity of 100 MW, supported by strategically reserved sites across Tokyo and surrounding areas.

Note: The planned expansion to 100 MW is expected to proceed in phases and will depend on factors including customer demand, power availability, equipment procurement, financing, regulatory approvals, and other customary development considerations.

Strategic Site Reserves in Core Metropolitan Areas

GoodVision and AI Storm have already secured and reserved more than fifty (50) potential sites across Tokyo and surrounding area, one of Japan’s most concentrated markets for enterprise, technology, research, and data center customers.

Locating AI factory capacity near these hubs reduces latency for inference workloads, positions the facilities close to the enterprise and research customers most likely to consume dedicated AI compute, and secures scarce, power-ready real estate ahead of intensifying competition for suitable sites. Securing available land and power resources in advance provides a meaningful first-mover advantage and de-risks the path to reaching the 100 MW target on schedule.

David Wang, CEO of GoodVision AI, said: “This partnership with AI Storm marks an important first step in scaling our AI Factory platform in Japan, one of our key strategic markets. The combination of high-density, liquid-cooled computing and a modular deployment model, positions us well to meet rising enterprise demand for dedicated AI inference capacity. We expect the Fukushima AI Factory to serve as a strategic foundation for future expansion in Japan and support the growth of recurring, infrastructure-based revenue over time.”

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