Business

This graph alone shows how global AI power consumption is getting out of hand very quickly – and it’s not just about hyperscalers or OpenAI

By Wayne Williams

Copyright techradar

This graph alone shows how global AI power consumption is getting out of hand very quickly - and it's not just about hyperscalers or OpenAI

Skip to main content

Tech Radar Pro

Tech Radar Gaming

Close main menu

the business technology experts

België (Nederlands)

Deutschland

North America

US (English)

Australasia

New Zealand

View Profile

Search TechRadar

Expert Insights

Website builders

Web hosting

Best web hosting
Best office chairs
Best website builder
Best antivirus
Expert Insights

Don’t miss these

AI workloads are reshaping infrastructure – here’s what data centers need to know

AI’s infrastructure problem is bigger than we think—here’s how to solve it

How can we create a sustainable AI future?

Many top data center locations could be at risk of climate change

AI’s energy demands are surging – the grid needs to catch up

Is the UK energy grid ready for AI’s power demands?

Global AI usage surge could cause US electricity prices to increase by 18% within years – and that’s just the beginning

Data center infrastructure is the “unsung foundation” of the Government’s ambitious AI agenda

$1 trillion worth of data centers by 2030: US leads the way when it comes to colocation and hyperscale capacity – but for how long?

Remember the doomed AI nation ship? A shipping giant is now planning a real, moving, floating data center that could power thousands of AI GPUs

Google says it will switch off energy-heavy AI usage at critical points if needed

Sam Altman’s vision for AI is huge – but there’s just one thing standing in his way

Not as thirsty as we thought – average data center uses less water than a ‘typical leisure center’, study claims

Meta unveils new plans for multi-gigawatt datacenter clusters the size of Manhattan

AWS is working on proprietary innovative cooling tech to use on Nvidia GPUs for now — I wouldn’t be surprised if Graviton chips get it as well

This graph alone shows how global AI power consumption is getting out of hand very quickly – and it’s not just about hyperscalers or OpenAI

Wayne Williams

27 September 2025

AI racks could consume 20 to 30 times the energy of traditional racks by 2030

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

(Image credit: Lennox Data Center Solutions)

AI-focused racks are projected to consume up to 1MW each by 2030
Average racks expected to rise steadily to 30-50kW within the same period
Cooling and power distribution becoming strategic priorities for future data centers

Long considered the basic unit of a data center, the rack is being reshaped by the rise of AI, and a new graph (above) from Lennox Data Centre Solutions shows how quickly this change is unfolding.

Where they once consumed only a few kilowatts, projections from the firm suggest by 2030 an AI-focused rack could reach 1MW of power use, a scale that was once reserved for entire facilities.
Average data center racks are expected to reach 30-50kW in the same period, reflecting a steady climb in compute density, and the contrast with AI workloads is striking.

You may like

AI workloads are reshaping infrastructure – here’s what data centers need to know

AI’s infrastructure problem is bigger than we think—here’s how to solve it

How can we create a sustainable AI future?

New demands for power delivery and cooling
According to projections, a single AI rack can use 20 to 30 times the energy of its general-purpose counterpart, creating new demands for power delivery and cooling infrastructure.

Ted Pulfer, director at Lennox Data Centre Solutions, said cooling has become central to the industry.
“Cooling, once ‘part of’ the supporting infrastructure, has now moved to the forefront of the conversation, driven by increasing compute densities, AI workloads and growing interest in approaches such as liquid cooling,” he said.
Pulfer described the level of industry collaboration now taking place. “Manufacturers, engineers and end users are all working more closely than ever, sharing insights and experimenting together both in the lab and in real-world deployments. This hands-on cooperation is helping to tackle some of the most complex cooling challenges we’ve faced,” he said.

Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!
Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.
The aim of delivering 1MW of power to a rack is also reshaping how systems are built.
“Instead of traditional lower-voltage AC, the industry is moving towards high-voltage DC, such as +/-400V. This reduces power loss and cable size,” Pulfer explained.
“Cooling is handled by facility ‘central’ CDUs which manage the liquid flow to rack manifolds. From there, the fluid is delivered to individual cold plates mounted directly on the servers’ hottest components.”

You may like

AI workloads are reshaping infrastructure – here’s what data centers need to know

AI’s infrastructure problem is bigger than we think—here’s how to solve it

How can we create a sustainable AI future?

Most data centers today rely on cold plates, but the approach has limits. Microsoft has been testing microfluidics, where tiny grooves are etched into the back of the chip itself, allowing coolant to flow directly across the silicon.
In early trials, this removed heat up to three times more effectively than cold plates, depending on workload, and reduced GPU temperature rise by 65%.
By combining this design with AI that maps hotspots across the chip, Microsoft was able to direct coolant with greater precision.
Although hyperscalers could dominate this space, Pulfer believes that smaller operators still have room to compete.
“At times, the volume of orders moving through factories can create delivery bottlenecks, which opens the door for others to step in and add value. In this fast-paced market, agility and innovation continue to be key strengths across the industry,” he said.
What is clear is that power and heat rejection are now central issues, no longer secondary to compute performance.
As Pulfer puts it, “Heat rejection is essential to keeping the world’s digital foundations running smoothly, reliably and sustainably.”
By the end of the decade, the shape and scale of the rack itself may determine the future of digital infrastructure.
You might also like

Cooling high-density data centers with coolant distribution units
New fanless cooling technology enhances energy efficiency for AI workloads
Liquid cooling gains momentum as AI workloads turn up the heat in data centers

Wayne Williams

Social Links Navigation

Wayne Williams is a freelancer writing news for TechRadar Pro. He has been writing about computers, technology, and the web for 30 years. In that time he wrote for most of the UK’s PC magazines, and launched, edited and published a number of them too.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.

AI workloads are reshaping infrastructure – here’s what data centers need to know

AI’s infrastructure problem is bigger than we think—here’s how to solve it

How can we create a sustainable AI future?

Many top data center locations could be at risk of climate change

AI’s energy demands are surging – the grid needs to catch up

Is the UK energy grid ready for AI’s power demands?

Latest in Pro

Watch out – hackers are using AI to make phishing emails even more convincing

Nearly 150,000 patient records exposed in major healthcare data breach – here’s what we know

This devious malware has jumped from Meta over to Google Ads and YouTube to spread – here’s how to stay safe

Microsoft flags dangerous XCSSET macOS malware targeting developers – so be on your guard

I helped create Amazon’s Alexa – here’s why I think businesses should embrace humanity’s analogous imperfection to succeed

US Government tells agencies to patch Cisco firewalls immediately, or face attack

Latest in News

YouTube Music is testing a new feature that sounds a lot like Spotify’s AI DJ

New Samsung Galaxy Z Tri-fold leaks hint at key software and camera zoom features

You can now use Google’s viral Nano Banana AI directly in Photoshop

ICYMI: the week’s 7 biggest tech stories from Apple’s response to ‘Scratchgate’ and the ROG Xbox Ally’s price reveal

Is the DJI Mini 5 Pro really a legal nightmare? Here’s what the world’s big drone regulators told me

Quordle hints and answers for Sunday, September 28 (game #1343)

LATEST ARTICLES

YouTube Music is testing a new feature that sounds a lot like Spotify’s AI DJ

Best Buy launches a surprise 48-hour flash sale ahead of Prime Day – here are the 15 best deals I’d buy

The Sony A7 V could launch soon – here are 5 upgrades that could make it the perfect all-rounder

NYT Connections hints and answers for Sunday, September 28 (game #840)

Quordle hints and answers for Sunday, September 28 (game #1343)

TechRadar is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Contact Future’s experts

Terms and conditions

Privacy policy

Cookies policy

Advertise with us

Web notifications

Accessibility Statement

Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street,

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait…