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AI could save us or destroy us. Too late now. We’re up to our eyeballs in it

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AI could save us or destroy us. Too late now. We’re up to our eyeballs in it

June 3, 2026 — 7:00pm

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Australia is in the midst of economic revolution.

No matter your thoughts on artificial intelligence, whether it will be our saviour or plunge us into some dystopian sci-fi form of hell, the impact of the technology is being felt across Australia right now.

The nation is amid an AI infrastructure spending boom the likes of which we haven’t seen since the nation’s miners went on a tear in the early 2010s.

That boom, the biggest since the 1850s gold rush, delivered a fillip to miners’ bottom lines, powered China’s industrial revolution and pushed plenty of cash into certain governments’ coffers.

We’ve just got some idea of how big a boom is coming after the Australian Bureau of Statistics released figures showing a record $6 billion was spent by businesses on equipment linked to data centres and AI in the three months to the end of March. Take into account the new buildings to house all this stuff, and spending soared 84 per cent to $21.8 billion over the past year.

In percentage terms, spending on AI and data is growing faster than during that early 2010s mining boom.

Mining is traditionally the biggest source of this nation’s capital expenditure. But that is clearly under threat. AMP economists reckon that within the next five to 10 years, it will be data centres and AI.

Wednesday’s national accounts showed spending by the private sector on buildings and equipment is soaring in the two states where the AI construction boom is really under way – NSW and........

© Brisbane Times