According to Anthropic’s blog, the company and the Gates Foundation have announced a partnership worth $200 million to develop AI technologies for health care, education, and farming in countries that rarely see investments in commercial AI technologies. The funding will include grant money, Claude API credits, and technical assistance for four years. Elizabeth Kelly, who heads the Beneficial Deployments team at Anthropic, described it as “really core to who we are as a company.” The deal is four times larger than the $50 million partnership the Gates Foundation struck with OpenAI in January. That one targets 1,000 African clinics by 2028. Claude to support vaccine screening and disease forecasting Around 4.6 billion people worldwide lack access to essential health services, per the WHO. Anthropic and the Gates Foundation will equip research centers to use Claude for computational screening of vaccine candidates before moving into pre-clinical work. First targets: polio, HPV, and preeclampsia. These are conditions pharmaceutical companies have historically found less commercially attractive to research. Separately, Anthropic will work with the Institute for Disease Modeling, a Gates Foundation research group, on malaria and tuberculosis forecasting. The goal is giving non-specialists tools for public health planning that currently require deep technical expertise. Director at Gates Foundation, Janet Zhou, told Reuters that the collaboration will fund projects for gathering and annotating data from African languages, followed by releasing such data publicly. AI systems perform poorly in dozens of African languages. The open-data approach came from “the needs of different partners and governments, including some of the fears that they may have around proprietary lock-in and sovereignty,” Zhou said. AI tutoring, crop data, and career tools round out the program The partnership will also produce AI tutoring and curriculum tools for K-12 students in the US, India, and sub-Saharan Africa. Knowledge graphs, the kind of structured data that helps AI organize educational content, will be built and released as public goods. Additionally, Claude will receive crop-specific improvements alongside datasets and benchmarks for farming applications, all released openly. Agricultural small farmers cater to about two billion people globally. For the US, the initiative is aimed at developing mobile competency portfolios, career counseling resources, and training-to-outcomes linkage frameworks. As Cryptopolitan reported in October, Anthropic’s enterprise strategy has centered on deploying Claude through large institutional partners like Deloitte, PwC, and Goldman Sachs. Gates Foundation collaboration takes this strategy further into the public sector, where financial motivation is minimal. Anthropic gains usage statistics from this deployment. The Gates Foundation receives access to cutting-edge AI technology without having to develop one itself. The smartest crypto minds already read our newsletter. Want in? Join them .