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See all briefings →NVIDIA just put real money behind a bottleneck everyone in AI infrastructure feels: optics. Its $500 million investment in Corning to fund three new US fiber plants lands as the IEA says global data centre electricity use jumped 17% in 2025—and power, grid, and network constraints are now moving in lockstep. The common thread is simple: “AI demand” isn’t a slogan anymore; it’s rewriting the supply chain, the grid capex plan, and the procurement calendar.
The Big Stories
NVIDIA invests $500M in Corning, three US fiber plants is the day’s clearest tell that the AI buildout is dragging upstream manufacturing along with it. NVIDIA is putting $500m into Corning and secured rights to buy $2.7bn more in stock, backing three new fiber plants i
Meta is basically saying the quiet part out loud: the grid is the bottleneck, not its appetite for data centres. In a striking move, Meta backs space solar and storage for data centers — with demonstrations targeted for 2028 — while conceding US interconnection timelines are running at roughly five years. That’s not sci-fi posturing so much as a pressure gauge reading: even the best-capitalised buyers in the market are hunting for “new-to-the-system” electrons.
The Big Stories
Meta’s bet on space-based solar and long-duration storage is less about near-term megawatts and more about optionality. The company says it already has more than 30 GW of contracted renewables and 7.7 GW of nuclear capacity, yet near-term builds are still constrai
North Carolina just put a price tag on “AI at any cost.” A new state bill would force large data centers (40MW+ or >1B liters of water/year) to pay the full marginal infrastructure cost of serving them, ban them from incentives, and require 25% on-site clean generation at launch — a direct shot at the ratepayer backlash that’s been building quietly for a year.
The Big Stories
North Carolina bill forces data centers to pay full infrastructure costs is the most explicit attempt yet to hard-code “you build it, you pay for it” into state policy. The proposal sets bright-line thresholds (≥40MW or >1 billion liters of water/year), removes eligibility for state and local incentives, and mandates closed-loop/reclaimed water plus annual public
India’s data centre buildout is starting to look like a water story as much as a compute story. In New Delhi, environmentalists are warning that the country’s AI and cloud boom could swallow nearly 37.5 billion litres of water a year—and they’re taking it straight to the Prime Minister’s Office. The government’s response: industry is adopting “advanced cooling technologies,” but the underlying momentum is hard to miss, with capacity up from 375MW (2020) to 1,500MW+ (2025).
The Big Stories
Environmentalists Warn India’s AI Boom Threatens Water Security puts an unusually concrete number on a problem the industry often hand-waves: scale. NatConnect’s letter flags a national water-security risk from AI and cloud growth, while the M
A single project in rural Utah is trying to bend the scale curve: O’Leary Digital’s “Project Stratos” is pitched as a 40,000‑acre mega data center paired with a nearly 9GW power plant in Box Elder County. The developers are promising unusually aggressive environmental safeguards—closed‑loop cooling and “low‑carbon” operations they claim are just 5% of the emissions of comparable plants—while the county is set to vote on approval at a special public meeting Monday at 4 p.m. The real story isn’t the marketing language; it’s what a yes (or no) would signal about how far local governments are willing to go to host campus‑scale AI infrastructure.
The Big Stories
Developers promise environmental safeguards for 40,000-acre data center — O’Lear
Google’s reported plan to put up to $40bn into Anthropic isn’t just another AI funding headline — it’s a capacity reservation dressed up as venture capital. In the same package, Google would commit as much as 5GW of TPU-based compute over five years, which is basically “multiple hyperscale campuses” worth of infrastructure. If that number holds, it’s a loud signal that the AI arms race is now constrained less by model talent and more by land, interconnection queues, cooling, and steel-in-the-ground execution.
The Big Stories
Google reportedly to invest up to $40B in Anthropic would combine an initial $10bn with up to $30bn tied to performance — and, crucially, up to 5GW of compute supplied over five years. The structure effectively bin
Microsoft just put numbers around what everyone in this market is feeling: demand is outrunning delivery. In its latest update, Azure growth ran at 40% YoY and the AI business hit a $37bn annual run rate — but the real tell was analysts pointing to delivery windows stretching from roughly six months to 18+ months because power, cooling, transformers, utility timelines, and physical capacity are all tight (Microsoft’s AI cloud demand outpaces data center delivery). That gap between what’s contracted and what can actually be built is quickly becoming the industry’s central plotline.
The Big Stories
Microsoft’s results underline that the “AI boom” isn’t constrained by customers or budgets — it’s constrained by infrastructure. Commercial RP
Oracle just took a big swing at the power bottleneck — and it did it by rewriting the usual “gas turbines + diesel backup” playbook. At its planned Project Jupiter AI campus in Doña Ana County, New Mexico, Oracle says it will use a fuel-cell-and-storage microgrid sized up to 2.45GW, underpinned by an agreement with Bloom Energy for up to 2.8GW (with 1.2GW contracted). If this model holds up at scale, it’s a shot across the bow at both grid timelines and the politics of onsite combustion.
The Big Stories
Oracle to Power Project Jupiter with Fuel-Cell Microgrid and Storage is the clearest signal yet that “bring your own power” is moving from a temporary workaround to a first-order design choice for AI campuses. Oracle plans to replace ga
Visakhapatnam just turned into the industry’s clearest “AI-scale or bust” signal. Reliance Industries is pitching a $17bn, 1.5GW data centre cluster in Andhra Pradesh with a captive solar-and-battery build alongside it — and that’s landing in the same city where Google’s partners have already broken ground on a gigawatt-class hub. The speed is the story… and so is the friction: local environmental clearance decisions are already being challenged on process, water, and power assumptions.
The Big Stories
Google has begun construction of a gigawatt-scale AI hub in Visakhapatnam, led by AdaniConnex and Nxtra by Airtel, with Google committing $15bn over 2026–2030 to build an AI ecosystem tha
Oracle just made one of the boldest on-site power calls we’ve seen in the AI era: Project Jupiter will be “fully powered” by Bloom Energy fuel cells, with up to 2.45GW of installed capacity planned for its Doña Ana County, New Mexico campus. That’s not a pilot or a hedge — it’s a wholesale replacement for what had been planned as gas turbines and diesel generators. Add in the unusually explicit community package (including $50m for water systems and $360m for schools/infrastructure/services), and Jupiter is shaping up as a template for how hyperscale AI campuses try to buy social licence as much as megawatts.
The Big Stories
Oracle and its partners are trying to pre-empt the two fights that reliably stall big AI builds: power and water
Karnataka is trying to do something most governments only talk about: rebuild citizen services around real-time data, automation, and “agentic AI” — and then back it up with a tougher sustainability lens for data centres. In one announcement, the state signalled it wants to be both an AI deployment lab and a data-centre-ready jurisdiction. The tell is the policy stack: new AI governance, more money for deeptech, and a rewrite of the Data Centre Policy 2022–27.
The Big Stories
Karnataka pushes AI-led i-governance and sustainable data centres is a fairly sweeping agenda shift: the state says it’s moving to “i-governance,” using real-time data, automation, and agentic AI systems across citizen services. If you’re tracking where public-sec
Karnataka just gave a pretty clear preview of what “AI-first government” looks like when it’s tied directly to data infrastructure. The state says it’s moving to “i-governance,” using real-time data, automation, and agentic AI across citizen services — while simultaneously tightening its Data Centre Policy for sustainability. If you’re investing in capacity (or the grid behind it), the interesting part is how fast public-sector digitisation is becoming a demand signal, not just a talking point.
The Big Stories
Karnataka pushes AI-led i-governance and sustainable data centres is more than a policy headline: the state is explicitly shifting to “i-governance,” with real-time data and automation as the operating model and agentic AI system
Bain Capital kicking off a process to sell a chunky slice of Bridge Data Centres is a clean signal that the market for scaled Asian data centre platforms is still open—if you’ve got the right story and enough megawatts. The reported ask is about $2bn for at least 40%, implying a $5bn valuation for a company founded in 2017 and now talking about 3GW by 2030. In a week where “AI demand” shows up in everything from energy-storage order books to campus debates about water, the money is still chasing capacity—but the scrutiny is rising too.
The Big Stories
Bain Capital to sell 40% stake in Bridge Data Centres is the day’s headline for anyone tracking platform liquidity. Bain has reportedly started a sales process to offload at least
Bain Capital is reportedly trying to cash out part of its bet on Bridge Data Centres — a 40%+ stake sale pitched at about $2bn, implying a ~$5bn valuation for the Singapore-based platform. In a market that’s been oscillating between “AI changes everything” exuberance and financing reality, a chunky secondary process like this is a useful truth-teller: it tests how much investors will pay for contracted scale versus a growth plan.
The Big Stories
Bain’s move to sell at least 40% of Bridge Data Centres for around $2bn (with a reported $5bn valuation) is the clearest signal in today’s flow about where private-market pricing might settle for Asia-Pacific digital infrastructure. Bridge was founded in 2017 and is targeting 3GW by 2030 across
A single number did a lot of talking today: 790MW. That’s what Wärtsilä is set to deliver for an off-grid natural-gas plant tied to a new Texas data centre—equipment in 2028, operations in late 2029, and explicitly framed around AI model-training hubs. In the same news cycle, regulators and politicians in North America kept tightening the “social licence” screws on data centres, while power-equipment giants effectively said the demand wave is already in their order books.
The Big Stories
Wärtsilä to supply 790MW off-grid power for Texas data centre is the clearest signal yet that “grid-constrained” doesn’t mean “project delayed” anymore—it increasingly means “build your own power plant.” The project uses 42 Wärtsilä 50SG engines, i
A Texas data centre is getting its own 790MW off-grid gas plant — not a microgrid, a full-on power station — and Wärtsilä is the one building it. In a market where everyone talks about grid constraints, this is a blunt admission that “interconnection queues” aren’t a plan. What’s striking is how today’s other stories rhyme with it: politicians delaying coal closures, regulators arguing over incentives, and equipment giants lifting guidance because data centres are now a first-order driver of the power supply chain.
The Big Stories
Wärtsilä to supply 790MW off-grid power for Texas data centre is the most consequential tell of the day. The order covers a 790MW natural gas plant using 42 Wärtsilä 50SG engines, with equipment delivery in 2
Microsoft just put a big flag in Southeast Asia: more than $1bn into Thailand from 2026–2028 for a new cloud and AI data centre region. That would be notable on its own — but it lands on the same day Dell’Oro says AI is pushing data centre capex to $726bn in 2025 and likely past $1tn in 2026. The punchline: the money is global and accelerating, but the politics and permitting in the US are moving the other way, with states openly re-litigating tax breaks, water use, noise, and grid impact.
The Big Stories
Microsoft pledges over USD $1bn for Thailand AI hub sets a clear marker for where hyperscalers think demand (and political runway) is heading. The plan is a new cloud and AI data centre region built with local and international partne
The EU is finally kicking off the first wave of carbon-market reforms — and it’s landing at the same time Big Tech is writing cheques for carbon removal. In today’s weekly ESG roundup, the European Commission launches the first of its planned EU ETS reform package, while Google, Meta, and McKinsey back U.S. reforestation-based carbon removal deals. For infrastructure investors, that’s the tell: compliance rules are tightening on one side, and voluntary carbon supply is getting “industrialised” on the other.
The Big Stories
The European Commission has launched the first of its planned reforms to the EU ETS carbon market. The immediate takeaway isn’t the fine print (we don’t have it here) — it’s the direction of travel: policymakers are
Maine just moved to hit the brakes on big data centers — a statewide pause on new projects 20MW and up until November 2027. That’s not a symbolic gesture: it’s a direct shot at the “build first, figure out grid impacts later” playbook, and it lands in the middle of a widening federal argument about whether data centers should pay more for the power system they’re straining. The subtext is clear: the industry’s social licence is no longer assumed, even in places that want investment.
The Big Stories
Maine moves to pause new large-scale data center construction after lawmakers passed a bill stopping new data center projects of 20MW+ until Nov 2027, explicitly to study impacts on electricity costs and the grid. The report
France just drew a thick line around “sovereign compute.” In a move that would’ve sounded unthinkable a few years ago, the state has bought supercomputer firm Bull from Atos for €404m, explicitly citing national security and nuclear weapons research ties at CEA-DAM. If you’ve been treating AI and HPC as “just another capacity cycle,” today’s reminder is blunt: governments now see this stack as strategic infrastructure.
The Big Stories
The French government has nationalized supercomputer firm Bull from Atos for €404 million, arguing the acquisition is needed to protect national security because Bull’s systems are used by the CEA-DAM nuclear weapons research lab. The story also flags Bull’s role in major exascale efforts, includi
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