AI

Still trying to catch your breath in 2025? Just wait till next year

2026ย forย dataย centresย meansย acceleration, innovation,ย andย transformationย 

Do you feel like the last year has flown by, whileย at the same time, a decadeโ€™s worthย of innovation and growth hasย somehowย beenย compressedย intoย 12 months.ย 

Yes? So,ย you obviously work in the dataย centre industry too.ย 

Last December, it might have felt likeย the last few years of breakneckย growth wasย transitioning intoย somethingย slightlyย more sedate. Instead, things just seem to have accelerated. More mega investment plans announced, faster GPUs unveiled, more government interestย in the sector.ย 

Any respite over Christmas will be brief, not least asย dataย centre operatorsย and customers weigh upย how their infrastructure has coped with the holiday shopping period.ย 

So, assuming youย do get a break at some point in December,ย what canย youย expect next year?ย 

The Numbers Don’t Lie: Growth Accelerates Into 2026ย 

The pace of development will beย just as rapid.ย Earlier this yearย CBREย saidย vacancy rates continued to fall, whileย everย persistent power constraints were not enough to hold back growth. Instead,ย hyperscalersย and cloud operators would look for alternative locations.ย ย 

Around the same time,ย Knight Frankย forecast thatย globalย liveย ITย capacity for 2025 would hitย 55,646ย MW, upย 22 percent on the previous year. Next year, things will cruise another 20 percent higherย to 66,504ย MW.ย ย 

Yes,ย thatโ€™sย aย slightย tempering ofย the headlineย growthย rate.ย But itย masks spectacular growth in some key markets. The Middle East dataย centre sectorย in particularย isย set to show almost 50 percent growth next year.ย 

Andย that was also before the announcement ofย another wave ofย massive investments. Meta, in July, unveiled its plans for a string of next generationย dataย centersย dubbed Titan. Are they going toย beย big? Well, Mark Zuckerberg illustrated how the floorplan of one of these monster facilities would cover most of Manhattan.ย 

Is this likely to be mirrored by other mega vendors?ย Googleย is raising over $3bn from a bond sale to finance further AI expansion, following a $6.75bn sale earlier this year. So, itย doesnโ€™tย look likeย theย big techย giants willย be closingย theirย wallets andย taking offย theirย high-viz vests anytime soon.ย 

Butย itโ€™sย one thing to build aย dataย centre the size of Manhattan.ย Itโ€™sย another to buildย multipleย dataย centresย that can serviceย said city.ย ย 

AI is undoubtedlyย driving growth, but as models and applications get to work on real world problems, latency and throughput will become more important,ย soย you can expect moreย dataย centreย activity at the edge.ย ย 

Welcome to the Spotlightย 

Whether greenfield or brownfield, this all means dataย centres will be ever more visible, and not just literally.ย Itโ€™sย inevitable that our industry is going to attract more scrutiny and political attention.ย ย 

This will come from multiple angles.ย National and local governments are desperate toย tempt dataย centre operationsย onto theirย turf,ย for the jobs and investment they bring and support downstream.ย They are also consciousย ofย the need toย establishย someย degree ofย data and AI sovereignty.ย ย 

At the same time, governmentsย have toย pay attention to the sustainability question around dataย centres.ย ย 

Thereโ€™sย no getting away from the fact that dataย centres absorb a growing proportion of electricity production, just as there is a broader push towards electrification. If consumer electricity prices go up because of dataย centresโ€™ย power use, that will feed through to unease and resentment. And a Manhattan-sized dataย centre on anyoneโ€™s doorstep is hardly going to go unnoticed. All politics is local after all.ย 

This should mean theย sweeping statementsย weโ€™veย seenย from political leadersย over the last year or so start turning into real world policies. These need toย fuel real world progress inย turning around planning holdups or speeding up electrical hookupsย just so builders can break ground. But we should also expect more detail on what data and AI sovereigntyย really means, and how this affects what is built where.ย 

Broaderย geopoliticalย questions willย become moreย pressing in 2026. The White House is keen to keep the USโ€™s AIย edge, andย has already restricted NVIDIAย exports to China. More recently, President Trump has mused that Jensen Huang will have to keep his top end chips exclusively for US users.ย ย 

Itโ€™sย impossible to predict what will happen for sure, except to say thatย whoever is in the Whitehouse hasย moreย bearing on what you have in your dataย centreย than atย anytimeย since theย early 1990s.ย [Yes,ย datacentresย did exist in the early 1990s. And so did export controls.]ย 

All of thisย suggestsย ever more uncertaintyย around the dataย centre industry. But I preferย toย  lookย at the upside, which is thatย theseย pressures andย uncertaintiesย will also drive innovation.ย 

We know that ever faster GPUs will suck in ever more power and throw out ever more heat. That will demand innovation in cooling, specifically liquid cooling. The megaย dataย centresย on the drawing board at Meta will demand cooling solutions that areย highlyย efficient, butย can also be built out quickly and easily, as will the new facilities being built in theย Middleย East. Those edge sites will demandย flexibleย cooling architectures that can beย adaptedย to specific locations โ€“ yet do not leave operators constantly reinventing the wheel.ย 

So,ย not only will we see increasedย take upย of liquid cooling,ย butย we will see a shift to modular, scalableย systems that can beย easilyย adapted to a myriad of locations. Think standardised technology that can be easilyย tunedย for multiple installations, rather than bespoke and expensive.ย 

And theย heatย they remove willย still have to go somewhere. So,ย brilliant engineersย willย focus on novel, useful ways to reuse the vast amounts of heat our increasingly vastย datacentresย are going to be producing.ย 

The case has already been proved with district heating projects, whether at Queen Mary University of London, or Stockholm Data Parks. And there are plenty of proof cases forย reusing excessย heat for hot water and heating swimming pools.ย 

But we shouldย alsoย expectย more initiatives around reusing heat for agriculture, and increasingly for a wider variety of industrialย processes.ย Lighter industries at first, butย hyperscalersโ€™ sites will be producing heat on a truly industrial scale, so we need industrial processes to match.ย 

With Great Power Comes Great Responsibilityย 

We all know that dataย centres are inextricably intertwined with society at large. But asย the importance ofย dataย centresย becomes moreย apparent, something else happens.ย 

Businesses, governments, and citizens begin toย understand thatย dataย centresย are, indeed, essential criticalย infrastructure.ย That meansย vindicationย for those of usย whoโ€™veย been arguing exactly that for years. But it also means responsibilities.ย 

So,ย we shouldย prepare forย growing awareness ofย theย need for resiliency, standards,ย andย reliability both at the broad dataย centre level and forย theย specific technologiesย within themย such as liquid cooling.ย 

As data centres step further into the public eye, our role as the backbone of the digital economy is no longer in question. With that visibility comes scrutinyย –ย from governments, regulators, and the public alike. Rather than resist it, our industry must be ready to explain its value, and show howย weโ€™reย enabling progress, sustainably and transparently.ย 

So,ย myย biggest prediction is that we will see a more mature, moreย responsibleย and more engaged industry.ย One thatย doesnโ€™tย turnย away from itsย responsibilities butย embraces them.ย ย 

One thatย brings the sameย innovative,ย methodical, engineering-led approachย weโ€™veย relied on to getย here to solving the inevitable challengesย thatย being โ€œhereโ€ creates.ย ย 

Because the alternative is not sustainable.ย Not next year, and certainly not in the years to come.ย 

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