The artificial intelligence sector is driving an infrastructure buildout unlike anything in modern history, with energy demands increasingly becoming the central challenge for the industry. Rather than compute power or algorithmic innovation, the limiting factor for AI expansion is now electricity supply. Industry analysts project that AI-related infrastructure spending could exceed $5 trillion by 2030, according to McKinsey estimates, as companies establish sprawling data-center campuses equipped with advanced processors, networking infrastructure, and sophisticated cooling systems.
The scale of required power capacity underscores just how resource-intensive AI deployment has become. Real estate analysts at JLL project that developers may need to build roughly 100 gigawatts of new data-center capacity to support anticipated AI demand—an electrical load comparable to that of major metropolitan areas. This unprecedented expansion is forcing tech companies and data-center operators to secure long-term energy contracts and invest heavily in grid modernization.
The energy constraint presents both a bottleneck and opportunity for utilities, renewable energy providers, and policymakers. As companies race to build AI infrastructure, the availability of reliable, abundant electricity has become as critical to competitive advantage as access to advanced silicon chips. This shift is reshaping capital allocation priorities across the technology sector and creating new dependencies on regional power markets.


