M&A
April 28, 2026
Vertiv acquired Strategic Thermal Labs on April 27, 2026,
adding cold-plate design, server-side liquid cooling
engineering, and high-density thermal validation to its
portfolio. Scott Armul pointed directly at the interface
problem: the gap between CDU flow specs and what specific cold
plate geometries actually need at full AI load. Vertiv is
buying the capability to have a technical opinion about how
servers should be thermally designed, not just how facilities
should support them.
Read more →
Market
April 28, 2026
MarketsandMarkets projects the global direct-to-chip liquid
cooling market at $3.33 billion in 2026, growing to $17.31
billion by 2032 at a 26.5% CAGR. Hyperscale operators lead at
27.1% CAGR. Asia Pacific fastest at 27.8%. Single-phase
water-glycol coolants dominate. The market is not growing
because vendors are selling well. It is being pulled by rack
density math that leaves operators with no alternative.
Read more →
Technology
April 28, 2026
Framing the cooling debate as liquid versus air is the wrong
unit of analysis. Air cooling handles non-AI workloads below
40 kW adequately. AI racks at 130 kW have no air-cooled path.
The hybrid architecture between those thresholds, rear-door
heat exchangers and direct-to-chip loops alongside existing
CRAH units, is the permanent operating model for most
facilities for the rest of this decade.
Read more →
Infrastructure
April 28, 2026
HPE's containerized direct liquid-cooled systems support up to
400 kW per rack with no server fans. Era4, a British AI
infrastructure company, began ground preparation in Sheffield
in early 2026 with hardware scheduled to be operational by
mid-year. Traditional data center construction runs 24 to 36
months. The containerized modular approach parallelizes site
prep and hardware integration, compressing the schedule to
months.
Read more →
Market
April 28, 2026
The global cooling tower market for data centers is projected
to reach $6.50 billion by 2034 at an 11.8% CAGR.
Closed-circuit systems are gaining share over open-loop
evaporative towers as water consumption regulation tightens.
SPX, EVAPCO, and Kelvion hold roughly 60% of the market. The
gap between "growing at 11.8% CAGR" and "municipalities
restricting evaporative cooling" will force operators toward
closed-loop architectures faster than demand growth alone
suggests.
Read more →
Technology
April 21, 2026
Accelsius announced general availability of the NeuCool IR150
at Data Center World 2026. The product integrates a two-phase
CDU, 42U of IT rack space, and all internal manifolding into a
single 800mm enclosure rated for 150 kW. No external
distribution unit. Zero water in the IT enclosure. ASHRAE W45
compatible. Supports NVIDIA Blackwell with headroom for Vera
Rubin. The CDU is not beside the rack. It is the rack.
Read more →
Technology
April 21, 2026
Peter de Bock, VP of Data Center Energy and Cooling at Eaton,
argues that NVIDIA Vera Rubin racks at 600 kW demand
aerospace-grade reliability, not telecom engineering. PUE
masks real efficiency by 0.3 points or more. His proposed
replacement metric: tokens per watt. Hot-water cooling at 45°C
in and 60°C out exploits a cubic relationship in heat
rejection that drops fan power by a factor of eight.
Read more →
Water
April 21, 2026
Cooling towers at Google's $2.4 billion campus in The Dalles
produce steam plumes that settle into the Columbia River
corridor, forming fog thick enough to divert flights from the
nearby airport. Google consumed 550 million gallons of water
in a single year for evaporative cooling, roughly 40% of the
city's total. Locals call the phenomenon the "Google Cloud."
The cooling industry needs to reckon with the externalities of
open-loop evaporative systems.
Read more →
Water
April 21, 2026
EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin launched the Water Reuse Action
Plan 2.0, naming data center cooling as an explicit federal
priority for recycled water. Microsoft's $31 million reuse
facility in Quincy, WA reclaims 138 million gallons per year.
Loudoun County and Google's Georgia campus already run on
reclaimed water. WRAP 2.0 is voluntary, but 200 partners are
signed on. Within five years, recycled water becomes the
default cooling supply for new evaporative builds.
Read more →
Vendors
April 21, 2026
Belden and OptiCool deliver an integrated rack-level system
with two-phase rear-door heat exchangers rated at 120 kW per
rack, 85% cooling energy reduction, and a claimed PUE of 1.02.
The refrigerant-based system leaves servers untouched and
ships through Belden's existing channel. For brownfield
operators who cannot rip out raised floors, the rear-door heat
exchanger just became harder to ignore.
Read more →
IP & R&D
April 21, 2026
A team at the Chinese Academy of Sciences deployed a
diamond-copper composite thermal interface material at an AI
computing node in Zhengzhou, achieving 80% cooling efficiency
improvement and thermal conductivity exceeding 1,000 W/mK. The
material also delivered a 10% chip performance gain. China's
domestic TIM production is a strategic play to reduce
dependence on Western thermal materials suppliers.
Read more →
Technology
April 21, 2026
Sujit Kamble of Schneider Electric laid out the full cooling
progression: air tops out at 50kW, direct-to-chip handles 80%
of heat at source, and two-phase immersion supports up to 1MW
per rack. CDU specs include 25-micron filtration, 2.5MW
capacity, and 20-year lifespan. With individual servers
exceeding $1 million in value, cooling reliability becomes an
asset protection problem.
Read more →
Efficiency
April 21, 2026
The global data center fleet consumed 683 TWh of electricity
in 2024. Cooling accounts for up to 50% of that total. The IEA
projects 1,479 TWh by 2030. Every degree Celsius raised at
server inlet saves roughly 4% in cooling energy. Most
facilities still overcool because they lack the
instrumentation to know what raising the temperature two
degrees will do to row 14.
Read more →
Immersion
April 17, 2026
Castrol is assembling the testing infrastructure immersion
cooling has been missing. The Submer collaboration puts
SmartPod and MicroPod tanks inside Castrol's own labs.
Iceotope covers the precision liquid side. RISE and the Open
Compute Project are where standards get written. The fluid is
the easy part. The ecosystem that proves the fluid works is
the hard part.
Read more →
Markets
April 17, 2026
Global data center power consumption crosses 1,050 TWh by end
of 2026, roughly the annual electricity use of Japan.
Direct-to-chip, immersion, and two-phase cooling cut related
power draw 50-60% versus air. The cooling decision has become
a capacity-planning decision. Operators with the right thermal
architecture fit more compute inside smaller utility
allocations.
Read more →
Efficiency
April 17, 2026
Onsite generators discard 50-65% of fuel energy as heat.
Absorption chillers turn that stream into cooling at 20-25 kW
per 2 MW delivered, versus 500 kW or more for an electric
chiller. Roughly a third of new data centers may run as fully
onsite-powered campuses by 2030. The cooling architecture
changes when the waste heat becomes the feedstock.
Read more →
Vendors
April 17, 2026
DataCool's new Alpine, Glacier, and Kodiak product lines
target AI-adjacent air cooling workloads. 300 tons equals
roughly 1.05 MW thermal, enough for 6-8 AI racks or 20-25
enterprise racks. Matt Polizzi frames it around AI demand. The
harder read is where air still fits in a hybrid build where
direct-to-chip takes the GPU load and AHUs handle the storage
and network tiers.
Read more →
Markets
April 17, 2026
Indian data centers are jumping from 5-10 kW per rack to 150
kW GPU clusters in the same buildings. Yotta's Nitin Jadhav,
Colt's Arif Khan, and Rackbank's Narendra Sen all confirm
cooling architecture is now the primary deal qualifier.
Traditional colocation is becoming commoditized. The margin is
moving to partners who can lead thermal planning and GPU
workload optimization.
Read more →
IP & R&D
April 17, 2026
Iceotope's patent portfolio hit 200 filings, 109 granted.
Chassis-level precision liquid cooling cuts energy use 40% and
water use 96% versus traditional methods. Neil Edmunds, Chief
Innovation Officer, called it years of engineering work on
practical cooling problems. Competing vendors now have to
engineer around the IP wall or have a licensing conversation.
That is how categories get locked.
Read more →
Space
April 17, 2026
Orbital, backed by a16z Speedrun, will launch NVIDIA-powered
AI servers on a SpaceX Falcon 9 in April 2027. Continuous
solar power. Radiative cooling into deep space. CEO Euwyn Poon
says AI progress is being constrained by the grid. If
inference workloads move off-planet, terrestrial capacity is
freed for training. The bet is long. The constraint is real.
Read more →
Operations
April 14, 2026
The liquid cooling market is growing at 30%+ annually.
Schneider Electric, through its Motivair acquisition, just
introduced the MCDU-70, a 2.5 MW coolant distribution unit
scalable beyond 10 MW. The real substance is operational:
constant differential pressure control, redundant pumps, UPS
on every CDU. Most facilities teams are commissioning liquid
loops for the first time. Schneider is trying to write the
rulebook before someone learns these lessons the expensive
way.
Read more →
Markets
April 14, 2026
BNP Paribas initiated coverage with an outperform rating and a
$345 price target. The numbers: a backlog above $15 billion,
up over 100% year-over-year, and a book-to-bill ratio around
3x. Roughly 80% of Vertiv's revenue is tied to data centers.
The stock has gained nearly 90% in 2026. BNP thinks Wall
Street consensus at $304 underestimates the runway.
Read more →
Infrastructure
April 14, 2026
Two new campuses. Rome gets 62 MW, opening early 2027. Milan
gets 84 MW, first phase 2028. The Mediterranean corridor now
accounts for 56% of Digital Realty's planned EMEA capex
through 2030. Data traffic from Asia, the Middle East, and
Africa flows into Europe through this region. Digital Realty
is also in discussions on an EU-backed AI gigafactory
requiring around 200 MW.
Read more →
Workforce
April 14, 2026
EdgeConneX launched a Global Training Center to prepare
operations teams for AI-era infrastructure. Every existing
procedure rewritten. New ones covering areas never previously
managed, including direct-to-chip liquid cooling. Their
Ingenuity platform supports 600+ kW per rack. The workforce
gap in liquid cooling is real. EdgeConneX decided to solve it
internally.
Read more →
Markets
April 14, 2026
Modine shares rose 7.5% after fiscal Q3 showed net sales up
31% to $805 million. The driver: data center sales within
Climate Solutions surged 78% year-over-year. Management raised
guidance. Analysts are unanimously bullish. One thing to
watch: all 11 insider trades over the past six months have
been sales. The business is performing. The people running it
are taking chips off the table.
Read more →
Community
April 14, 2026
Air-cooled facilities produce 60-80 decibels, comparable to a
gas lawnmower running continuously. Water-cooled facilities
sit at 40-60 dB. In water-scarce regions where air cooling is
the only option, noise is joining water usage, energy costs,
and light pollution on the list of community grievances.
Cooling method selection is becoming a community relations
decision as much as a thermal engineering one.
Read more →
Infrastructure
April 8, 2026
NRT14 opens at the NRT campus in Inzai City, Chiba — the
campus is approaching 100 MW total IT power. Hybrid liquid and
air cooling. DGX-Ready certified. Up to 150 kW per rack. A
joint venture with Mitsubishi Corporation. The Asia-Pacific AI
colocation build is moving faster than the spec sheets
operators were using 18 months ago.
Read more →
Energy
April 8, 2026
US AI data center power demand: 4 GW in 2024, projected 123 GW
by 2035 (Deloitte). Grid interconnection takes 4–5 years
minimum; 10 years in congested markets. Hyperscalers are now
co-investing in grid infrastructure to jump the queue.
Operators who are not hyperscalers are competing for what's
left. Liquid cooling's 25–30 MW efficiency gain per 100 MW
facility is now a grid capacity argument, not just a density
argument.
Read more →
Policy
April 8, 2026
California has at least 270 data centers and no requirement to
report water use. The governor vetoed the disclosure bill
while signing one that only studies electricity. Some
facilities under construction are allocated up to 8 million
gallons per day. On hot summer days, a large data center can
exceed 1 million gallons of withdrawal. The numbers are real.
They're just not being counted.
Read more →
Water
April 8, 2026
MENA holds 6.3% of the global population and 1.4% of global
renewable freshwater. 11 of the 17 most water-stressed
countries on earth are in the region. Kuwait runs 90% of
drinking water through desalination. Oman runs 86%. Data
center investment is accelerating in anyway. Closed-loop
liquid cooling with dry heat rejection is the only
architecture that doesn't compound the problem.
Read more →
Operations
April 8, 2026
More than 70% of global data center capacity sits in existing
buildings designed for 5–15 kW per rack. Brownfield retrofit
is not the edge case — it is the mainstream condition for
liquid cooling adoption. Rack-by-rack deployment is the
approach that works. The real bottleneck is not the
technology. It is the workforce gap between what the hardware
requires and what facilities teams currently know how to
commission.
Read more →
Funding
April 7, 2026
PIMCO is in discussions to underwrite up to $14 billion in
debt financing for Oracle data center infrastructure through a
special purpose vehicle structure. Oracle is targeting $45–50
billion in 2026 infrastructure financing, bypassing its own
balance sheet through off-balance-sheet project finance. The
deal structure defines what data center project finance looks
like at hyperscale.
Read more →
Infrastructure
April 7, 2026
Iranian IRGC forces have struck AWS's Bahrain cloud facility
at least four times, with a March 1 strike on AWS UAE and a
separate April 1 fourth strike on Bahrain. Oracle Dubai was
claimed on April 2. Physical site selection and geopolitical
risk are now part of the cooling infrastructure planning
conversation.
Read more →
Hardware
April 7, 2026
Intel has agreed to join the Terafab consortium alongside
SpaceX and Tesla to provide foundry capacity targeting one
terawatt annually of AI compute output. Intel Foundry posted a
$10.32 billion operating loss in 2025. The 18A process node is
the bet. The cooling demand from that compute volume is not
theoretical.
Read more →
Sustainability
April 7, 2026
A new study quantifies the local heat island effect of data
center waste heat rejection: approximately 2°C average warming
within nearby areas of large facilities, with one worst-case
measurement of 9.1°C above baseline. No before/after
measurements from actual operational sites exist yet. The
thermal externality is real, growing, and increasingly a
regulatory flashpoint.
Read more →
Technology
April 7, 2026
Air cooling tops out at 20–25 kW per rack. The GB200 NVL72
draws 120–130 kW per rack. The delta is not bridgeable with
fans. Retrofit costs run 40–60% of original construction. The
liquid cooling market hit $3 billion in 2025 and is projected
to reach $7 billion by 2029. The decision has already been
made for anyone buying current-generation hardware.
Read more →
Infrastructure
April 7, 2026
The mismatch between GPU iteration cycles (12–18 months) and
traditional data center design-build timelines (24–36 months)
is the core argument for modular data center deployment.
Factory-built modules ship in 12–16 weeks, with factory
testing replacing on-site commissioning. Operators building
traditional facilities for Blackwell are already behind the
next architecture cycle.
Read more →
Technology
April 6, 2026
A Penn State research team developed physics-informed
reinforcement learning software that can cut data center
cooling costs by up to 25% without hardware changes. The
system analyzes real-time climate conditions and electricity
pricing, dynamically adjusting cooling intensity. Results: up
to 25% reduction in cooling electricity costs. Presentation at
IEEE ITherm Conference, May 2026.
Read more →
Market
April 6, 2026
A well-funded neocloud operator recently failed to close a
colocation deal despite 15-year terms, 6 months prepaid,
millions in liquid cooling coverage, and pricing at
$155–160/kW — above market. The reason: no investment-grade
credit. ABI Research pegs the neocloud market at $250 billion
by 2030. Cooling vendors who built 2026 pipelines around
neocloud deal assumptions should be updating their models.
Read more →
Hardware
April 6, 2026
AI GPU clusters create millisecond-scale transient power
spikes that traditional lead-acid and lithium-ion UPS
batteries were never engineered to absorb. Nickel-zinc
chemistry offers a water-based electrolyte with no thermal
runaway risk, 25–50% lower lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions,
and over 90% recyclability — with no active thermal management
requirement.
Read more →
Hardware
April 6, 2026
IBM and Arm are enabling Arm-native applications to run inside
IBM Z and LinuxOne mainframe systems through virtualization
compatibility — without hardware modifications. Regulated
industries with data sovereignty requirements can now run
Arm-native AI inference inside the same security boundary as
their transaction data, without ETL pipelines or cloud
exposure.
Read more →
Infrastructure
April 5, 2026
The IRGC claimed strikes on Oracle's Dubai data center and
Amazon's Bahrain cloud facility. Bahrain's Interior Ministry
confirmed a fire at the Amazon site. The cooling industry
models thermal risk, power risk, and supply chain risk.
Physical destruction of facilities by state-level military
actors was not in the models.
Read more →
Supply Chain
April 5, 2026
Trump's reciprocal tariffs land hardest on the countries where
CDUs, cold plates, and cooling components are manufactured.
CoolIT makes hardware in China and Vietnam. CDU lead times are
already 16–24 weeks. The vendors who close 2026 without a
clear USMCA-eligible production percentage are quoting prices
they cannot hold.
Read more →
Policy
April 5, 2026
Senator Durbin introduced the Data Center Water and Energy
Transparency Act on March 25, adding water reporting
requirements and state-level disclosure to the Hawley-Warren
energy reporting push. A 100 MW facility consumes as much
water as 2,600 households. Fine authority for noncompliance is
in the bill.
Read more →
Guide
April 2, 2026
The full loop, stage by stage: cold plate to manifold to CDU
to heat rejection. Single-phase runs water-glycol at 50 PSI.
Two-phase runs refrigerant at 150 PSI. Real operating
parameters for each stage, not vendor marketing numbers.
Read more →
Technology
April 2, 2026
Every chip runs at a different temperature. Every temperature
creates a different pressure drop. The chip running hottest
gets the least coolant flow. Fixed orifices cannot solve a
dynamic problem. The vendors who fix flow balancing at the
component level will own the reliability story.
Read more →
Technology
April 2, 2026
Single-phase runs a water-glycol blend at 50 PSI like an
automotive radiator. Two-phase runs refrigerant at 150 PSI
with a phase change at the chip surface, like an automotive AC
system. Same form factor. Different physics, different failure
modes, different scaling limits.
Read more →
Editorial
April 2, 2026
The industry obsesses over PUE at the facility level. The real
waste is inside the cooling loop: overdriven pumps, flow
imbalances forcing excess energy consumption, and static
components that dynamic control could eliminate. A 100 MW
facility could save 1 to 3 MW from component-level
optimization alone.
Read more →
Technology
April 2, 2026
Single-phase immersion holds 80.9% of the data center
immersion market. Submer signed for 1 GW in India. GRC pulled
Samsung Ventures. Asperitas closed a round backed by Shell.
The technology runs on PFAS-free fluids sourced from dozens of
global suppliers. How it works, who is building it, and where
it falls short.
Read more →
Technology
April 2, 2026
ZutaCore and Parker Hannifin built a system that could cool
100 kW racks with 3.6 liters of refrigerant and zero water.
PUE of 1.02. Then 3M exited PFAS manufacturing. Microsoft and
Meta walked away. Chemours is racing to replace the fluid. The
architecture still works. The chemistry does not.
Read more →
Energy
April 1, 2026
Grid interconnection for a new large data center takes 4–5
years at minimum; 10 years in congested markets. The DOE
estimates 100 GW of new generating capacity will be required
by 2030 — data centers account for roughly half. Every
percentage point of cooling efficiency improvement converts
directly into compute capacity within the same power envelope.
Read more →
Energy
March 31, 2026
Google's emissions up 50%. Meta's up 60%. Natural gas powers
over 40% of US data centers. Every megawatt of gas-fired power
means heat rejection at scale. The climate backslide has a
direct thermal infrastructure cost that nobody is pricing in.
Read more →
Technology
March 31, 2026
Jensen Huang: "No water chillers are necessary." At 45°C
supply temperature, dry coolers handle rejection in nearly
every climate. Potential $4M annual savings per 50MW facility.
The operators still designing around chilled water plants are
building the wrong building.
Read more →
Infrastructure
March 31, 2026
Closed-loop liquid cooling. Zero operational water claims. In
a desert that hits 100°F regularly. Gary Demasi announced the
sixfold investment increase at the Borderplex Alliance summit.
Meanwhile, Meta is building 10 gas-fired power plants in
Louisiana. Two very different thermal stories from the same
company.
Read more →
Policy
March 31, 2026
Bipartisan Senate push for mandatory EIA reporting on data
center energy consumption. Cooling accounts for 30-40% of
total draw. Once that shows up as a named line item on a
federal spreadsheet, it becomes a regulatory target.
Pennsylvania already passed H.B. 1834.
Read more →
Policy
March 31, 2026
The AI Data Center Moratorium Act will almost certainly die.
But 36 projects blocked, $162B disrupted, and 100+ communities
with their own moratoriums. The cooling supply chain needs
18-24 month visibility. Political noise cuts that in half.
Read more →
Market
March 31, 2026
S&P counted 113 completed transactions in 2025. North American
vacancy at 1% for the second consecutive year. AMD and Meta
signed a $100B agreement for 6 GW of AI capacity. Every one of
these facilities needs cooling infrastructure. The procurement
window is now.
Read more →
Market
March 31, 2026
BloombergNEF: capex from the top 14 operators nearing $750B in
2026. 23 GW under construction globally, 75% in the US. The
cooling supply chain's manufacturing capacity was built for
5-8 GW annually. CDU lead times, cold plate supply, and
skilled labor are all bottlenecks.
Read more →
Energy
March 31, 2026
4.4% of total US electricity. EPRI projects 9-17% by 2030. The
efficiency delta between air cooling and liquid cooling at
national scale represents tens of TWh of potential savings.
The economic argument for liquid cooling is no longer about
rack density. It is about the grid.
Read more →
Water
March 31, 2026
Water capacity needed by 2030: up to 1.45 billion gallons per
day. Indirect water through power plants accounts for 72% of
total consumption. Direct-to-chip systems still reject heat to
cooling towers. The only zero-water path has higher energy
costs. The water math is the cooling industry's biggest
unsolved problem.
Read more →
Vendor
March 31, 2026
400kW and 800kW CDUs. R1234ze(E) refrigerant at GWP of 1.
Free-cooling threshold at 10°C. This is a northern Europe
play, targeting colocation and enterprise rather than
hyperscale. The first major Japanese manufacturer to enter
European data center liquid cooling.
Read more →
Infrastructure
March 30, 2026
StarCloud raised $170M at a $1.1B valuation to build data
centers in orbit. Passive radiative cooling in vacuum
eliminates water, fans, and compressors entirely. A 1m x 1m
plate radiates 838 watts to deep space. The terrestrial
cooling industry should treat that as a provocation, not a
curiosity.
Read more →
Regulation
March 30, 2026
Ohio's Attorney General certified a constitutional amendment
petition to cap data centers at 25MW statewide. Organizers
need 413,000 signatures by July 2026. Twenty-five megawatts is
the exact threshold where cooling becomes industrial
infrastructure. The noise, the water, the towers. That is what
communities are fighting.
Read more →
Infrastructure
March 30, 2026
Mistral AI secured $830M from seven banks for a 44MW facility
south of Paris with 13,800 Nvidia GB300 GPUs. Liquid cooling
from day one. The sovereign AI narrative extends to the
thermal supply chain. Schneider Electric sits 40km from the
site. That is not a coincidence.
Read more →
Infrastructure
March 30, 2026
$300B in hyperscaler capex. CDU lead times at 6-9 months.
Skilled commissioning labor booked a year out. The thermal
bottleneck is now the binding constraint on the AI buildout.
GPU supply is easing. Cooling supply is not.
Read more →
Guide
March 30, 2026
The definitive resource on data center cooling. Air cooling
fundamentals, direct-to-chip liquid cooling, immersion
cooling, CDUs, heat rejection, the PFAS crisis, Nvidia Vera
Rubin's 45C warm-water architecture, hybrid retrofit
economics, water regulation, and every market number that
matters. 13 sections. 31 sources. If you build, operate,
invest in, or sell into data centers, this is the map.
Read more →
M&A
March 30, 2026
Vertiv announced the acquisition of ThermoKey, an Italian dry
cooler and microchannel heat exchanger manufacturer founded in
1991. CEO Giordano Albertazzi: "Heat rejection is becoming
increasingly critical." Liquid cooling concentrates heat at
the rack. The outdoor rejection equipment at most sites was
never designed for what comes next. Vertiv is building
ownership of the full thermal chain.
Read more →
Technology
March 30, 2026
SemiQ introduced the QSiC Dual3 family of 1200V SiC MOSFET
modules targeting 250kW liquid chiller motor drives. Power
density hits 240 W/in³. Replacing IGBTs with SiC yields a 2.4%
efficiency gain with 50% reduction in total losses. At 250kW
per chiller, that is 6kW saved per unit. The component inside
the cooling system that nobody talks about.
Read more →
Infrastructure
March 30, 2026
Applied Digital COO Laura Laltrello and VP of Engineering
Stephen Lattimer: mechanical cooling systems are the #1
operational vulnerability at hyperscale. Commissioning starts
30-45 days after groundbreaking. Every assumption the design
engineers made gets stress-tested when actual GPUs generate
actual heat. The assumptions are always partially wrong.
Read more →
Technology
March 30, 2026
GPUs moved to liquid cooling. The fans disappeared. But every
NVMe SSD ever designed assumed airflow. In NVIDIA's fanless
GB200 NVL72 racks, storage drives sit in still air with no
thermal path. Solidigm shipped the first cold-plate cooled
enterprise SSD. Wiwynn built a 100% fanless 96-drive chassis.
The bottleneck nobody planned for.
Read more →
Hardware
March 30, 2026
MiTAC debuted the MR1100 series at CloudFest 2026: a 48U
cold-plate cooled rack packing 256 AMD MI355X GPUs drawing
1,400W each. OCP-compliant. Case study with French cloud
provider Qarnot claims PUE of 1.01 through 95% waste heat
recovery. When second-tier ODMs start shipping purpose-built
liquid cooling racks, the supply chain is shifting.
Read more →
Supply Chain
March 30, 2026
The Ascend 950PR draws 600W and delivers 1.56 PFLOPS of FP4
compute. Huawei plans to ship 750,000 units this year.
ByteDance and Alibaba are ordering. At 600W per card, these
chips cannot be air-cooled at scale. A parallel cooling
ecosystem is forming in China with domestic vendors Sugon and
Envicool. The thermal engineering is identical. The vendor
ecosystems are diverging.
Read more →
Infrastructure
March 30, 2026
Individual facilities requesting 5-11GW from a grid that peaks
at 3GW. Texas data centers consumed 25 billion gallons of
water in 2025. By 2030: 29 to 161 billion gallons. No central
entity in the state tracks forward-looking water demand. The
gap between those two numbers is a direct question to the
cooling industry.
Read more →
Regulation
March 30, 2026
Marquette Law School Poll: 70% opposition, up from 55% four
months ago. Bipartisan. State and federal moratorium bills
filed. The three flashpoints driving the backlash: cooling
noise, water consumption, and grid strain. Operators who show
up with immersion cooling and zero evaporative loss will have
a different conversation than those proposing rooftop air
handlers.
Read more →
Infrastructure
March 30, 2026
Four Tokyu Group companies will install a modular data center
beneath Tokyo's Oimachi Line starting June 2026. Trains
overhead introduce variable thermal conditions and severe
vibration. The target workload: generative AI inference.
Immersion cooling may be the only viable path. If it works,
Tokyu's eight-line railway network becomes a distributed edge
computing corridor.
Read more →
Supply Chain
March 30, 2026
Beihang University and Harbin Institute of Technology, both on
the US export blacklist, procured Supermicro systems with
Nvidia A100 GPUs. This follows the $2.5 billion smuggling
indictment of Supermicro's co-founder. GPU servers generating
massive thermal loads in facilities operating outside
legitimate supply chains.
Read more →
Technology
March 30, 2026
Nvidia's GB200 NVL72 draws 120-130 kW per rack. Cold plate
liquid cooling achieves 300x faster heat removal than air. The
liquid cooling market hit $3B in 2025, projected $7B by 2029.
59% of operators plan liquid cooling within 5 years. Google,
Microsoft, and Meta have already rebuilt their stacks around
liquid as the default. Air cooling is the legacy system now.
Read more →
Market
March 29, 2026
Josh Magnuson, Ecolab's general manager for global water
solutions, told Bloomberg that cooling demand will grow 20% or
more per year "for the foreseeable future," regardless of
whether AI is a bubble. "If there's an AI bubble or not, I
don't think it matters," he said, days after Ecolab agreed to
pay $4.75 billion for CoolIT Systems. KKR is walking away with
a 15x return in three years. The cooling industry just got its
clearest signal yet that the investment case has decoupled
from the AI hype cycle.
Read more →
M&A
March 29, 2026
Trane Technologies completed its acquisition of LiquidStack on
March 3, giving the $21 billion HVAC conglomerate a
proprietary two-phase immersion cooling platform. CEO Dave
Regnery made three acquisitions in rapid succession: modular
cooling plants, direct-to-chip cold plates, and now immersion
tanks. Combined with Eaton's $9.5B Boyd deal and Ecolab's
$4.75B CoolIT deal, three legacy industrials spent north of
$14 billion on liquid cooling companies in March alone.
Read more →
M&A
March 29, 2026
Blackstone Energy Transition Partners announced a majority
stake acquisition in Advanced Cooling Technologies, a
Lancaster, Pennsylvania manufacturer of two-phase liquid
cooling, heat pipes, and cold plates. ACT, founded by Jon Zuo
and Scott Garner in 2003, built its reputation on defense and
aerospace thermal engineering. Blackstone's BETP IV fund
closed at its $5.6 billion hard cap. ACT slots into a
portfolio that already includes power generation, grid
infrastructure, and backup power.
Read more →
Sustainability
March 29, 2026
A UC Riverside and Caltech study led by Shaolei Ren found that
data center peak water demand could require $10 billion to $58
billion in new water infrastructure by 2030. Peak daily demand
from evaporative cooling can spike 6 to 10 times above
average, with some facilities exceeding 30x. The aggregate
peak need rivals New York City's daily water supply. Google
already consumes 33% of The Dalles, Oregon's water. The people
paying the infrastructure bill are not the ones training the
models.
Read more →
Technology
March 29, 2026
Alfa Laval launched FreeWaterLoop at Data Center World in
London, its first purpose-built data center product. The $6.6
billion Swedish industrial giant combines 88 years of plate
heat exchanger R&D with Framo pump engineering to create a
facility-loop cooling system that uses natural water sources
and returns them with near-zero net consumption. When a
company founded in 1883 redirects R&D toward your industry,
the opportunity is real.
Read more →
Supply Chain
March 29, 2026
Munters recorded 2.1 billion SEK ($200M+) in data center
cooling orders in 2025, anchored by an $82 million Geoclima
Circlemiser chiller deal for an AI facility. The company is
opening a 200,000 sq ft Virginia factory in Q2 2026, planting
chiller production within driving distance of the largest data
center market on the planet. The Circlemiser's cylindrical
condenser design increases heat exchange surface by 45% in the
same footprint. Proximity and integration are Munters' bet.
Read more →
Technology
March 23, 2026
Nvidia unveiled the Vera Rubin Space-1 module for AI data
centers in orbit, developed with Axiom Space. The initiative
treats space as the next compute frontier, where solar power
is five times stronger and the vacuum of space serves as an
infinite heat sink. For terrestrial cooling vendors, the
signal matters more than the timeline: Nvidia is telling the
market that ground-based thermal constraints are a binding
limitation on AI scaling.
Read more →
Supply Chain
March 23, 2026
TSMC reported $33.7 billion in quarterly revenue, up 35.9%
year over year. The HPC segment grew 48% and now accounts for
58% of total revenue. The company has committed $45 billion in
2026 capex and commenced 2nm mass production. For the cooling
industry, TSMC's production volume is a leading indicator for
thermal management demand 12 to 18 months out. The chip
volumes are coming. Whether the cooling supply chain is ready
is a different question.
Read more →
Infrastructure
March 23, 2026
Elon Musk's proposal for lunar electromagnetic mass drivers to
launch satellites carrying AI data center hardware reduces the
escape velocity requirement from 11.2 km/s to 2.38 km/s. Solar
power in space is five times more efficient than on Earth's
surface. The logistics chain from lunar surface to operational
orbit is the unsolved engineering problem.
Read more →
Infrastructure
March 22, 2026
Elon Musk launched the Terafab on Saturday in Austin, a joint
venture between Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI to build a 2-nanometer
chip fab with a $20 to $25 billion price tag. The facility
targets 100,000 wafer starts per month, scaling to one
million. The cooling implications are stacked three deep: the
fab itself needs industrial-scale process cooling in central
Texas, the chips it produces will fill data center racks that
need liquid cooling, and the orbital data center ambition
signals that the people writing the largest checks view
terrestrial cooling as a bottleneck worth $20 billion to
circumvent.
Read more →
Market
March 22, 2026
A new market forecast projects data center immersion cooling
will grow from $2.49 billion in 2024 to $14.06 billion by 2034
at an 18.9% CAGR. The numbers look impressive in a slide deck.
On the ground, immersion still faces the same obstacles that
have kept it in pilot programs for years: operational
complexity, workforce readiness, PFAS regulatory risk, and
direct-to-chip cold plates eating its lunch at the volume
tier.
Read more →
Sustainability
March 21, 2026
U.S. data centers consumed 17 billion gallons of water for
cooling in 2023. Projections show 33 billion by 2028. Internal
Microsoft forecasts obtained by the New York Times showed the
company's own water use tripling by 2030. The Great Lakes
region has 738 new data centers announced or under
construction. Sam Altman called the concerns "completely
untrue." The data says otherwise. Seven major publications ran
investigations in the same quarter.
Read more →
Supply Chain
March 21, 2026
Supermicro cofounder Wally Liaw was arrested for conspiring to
route banned Nvidia H200 and B200 GPUs to China through a
Southeast Asian intermediary. The scheme involved dummy
servers staged for compliance audits and servers repacked in
unmarked boxes. Supermicro stock dropped 33%. For the cooling
industry, $2.5 billion in diverted GPU servers means thousands
of high-density racks generating thermal loads that need
liquid cooling outside legitimate supply chains.
Read more →
M&A
March 20, 2026
Ecolab is nearing a deal to acquire CoolIT Systems from KKR
for between $4.5 billion and $5 billion. When KKR took a
majority stake in 2023, the company was valued at roughly $270
million. At the upper end of the reported range, that is an
18x return in three years. The deal would rank among the
largest pure-play cooling transactions in data center history.
Read more →
Supply Chain
March 20, 2026
A procurement team from Google's Taiwan operations traveled to
China this month to meet with Envicool and at least one other
manufacturer about purchasing liquid cooling equipment for AI
data centers. The trip reveals a supply problem that the
entire hyperscale sector is now contending with. The global
market for AI server liquid cooling systems is projected to
reach more than $17 billion in 2026, up from $8.9 billion last
year.
Read more →
Regulation
March 20, 2026
Governor Pritzker has proposed a two-year pause on new tax
credits for data center projects. The POWER Act, working its
way through committee, would require data centers to source
renewable energy, disclose water use, and obtain water permits
from the Illinois EPA. Communities across the state have
already rejected proposals, and nearly 5,000 petition
signatures were filed against one Joliet project.
Read more →
Technology
March 20, 2026
Orbis Electric, a 21-person startup in Sonoma County that
started building e-bike motors, has unveiled a rare-earth-free
cooling engine for AI data centers. The HaloDrive motor-pump
claims 96% efficiency and supports rack densities exceeding
200 kW. Founder Marcus Hays projects $500 million in annual
revenue by 2028. The gap between that projection and today's
headcount is considerable.
Read more →
Research
March 20, 2026
A team at NYU Tandon has proposed using zeolite thermal
batteries, charged with factory waste heat and trucked to data
centers, to replace compression chillers. The modeled result:
an 86% reduction in cooling electricity consumption. The
system is still on paper, but the median distance between U.S.
data centers and the nearest industrial waste heat sources is
just 57 kilometers.
Read more →
Technology
March 19, 2026
Microsoft has developed an in-chip microfluidics cooling
system that removes heat up to three times more efficiently
than current cold plate technology. Microscopic channels
etched into the back surface of a silicon die circulate
coolant at the exact locations where heat is generated. Lab
testing showed a 65% reduction in maximum GPU temperature
rise. The approach, developed with Swiss startup Corintis,
could shift the cooling function from the data center supply
chain into semiconductor packaging itself.
Read more →
Hardware
March 18, 2026
Nvidia's Vera Rubin architecture will ship with liquid cooling
as a standard component in H2 2026. At GTC, Nvidia named four
cold plate suppliers, including Asia Vital Components and
Cooler Master, and released standardized specifications.
Cooling infrastructure costs exceed $57,000 per system. Jensen
Huang stated that power delivery and liquid cooling now
require co-design. The GPU company just decided the cooling
question for every operator buying its hardware.
Read more →
Water
March 16, 2026
Evaporative cooling is incompatible with seawater due to salt
fouling — but three viable approaches exist. Google uses Wet
Surface Air Cooling at its Finland facility. Microsoft's
Project Natick used closed-loop cold seawater from the ocean
floor. The fresh water crisis makes the coastal cooling
conversation urgent for the industry's next buildout cycle.
Read more →
Sustainability
March 12, 2026
A growing number of data center operators have started
swapping water-cooled systems for air-cooled alternatives,
claiming sustainability wins. The math tells a different
story. Air cooling eliminates on-site water use, sure. But it
doubles or triples electricity consumption, pushing the water
burden upstream to power plants that need their own cooling
loops to generate that extra juice.
Read more →
A growing number of data center operators have started
swapping water-cooled systems for air-cooled alternatives,
claiming sustainability wins. The math tells a different
story. Air cooling eliminates on-site water use, sure. But
it doubles or triples electricity consumption, pushing the
water burden upstream to power plants that need their own
cooling loops to generate that extra juice. The problem
doesn't vanish. It moves.
Colocation vacancy rates have cratered to 2.3%, down from
9.8% in 2020. The construction pipeline grew tenfold over
the same period. Every new facility that comes online has to
make a fundamental call on how it manages heat, and that
decision ripples through local water tables and power grids
for decades. A large data center drinks roughly what a town
of 50,000 people does in a day. Regulators in multiple
states have started blocking projects over that kind of
draw.
The operators getting this right tend to match their cooling
architecture to their actual scale. Hyperscalers running
100+ MW loads are exploring on-site power generation,
including hydrogen fuel cells that produce water as a
byproduct. Facilities in central Ohio are already piloting
private microgrids built around this concept. Mid-tier and
edge deployments, meanwhile, are finding that modern
evaporative cooling towers can hit the efficiency marks
without the electricity penalty. And micro data centers,
anything from a large closet to a shipping container, remain
firmly in air-cooling territory, where even the smallest
cooling tower would be ten times more capacity than needed.
True sustainability means refusing to solve one problem by
creating another. The operators who claim green credentials
while tripling their grid draw are playing an accounting
trick, not running an efficient facility.
Technology
March 9, 2026
Schneider Electric ships cooling units packed with IoT sensors
that run predictive maintenance cycles before failures happen.
Iceotope has built immersion cooling platforms that work
across traditional, hyperscale, and edge environments, pushing
PUE numbers into territory that air-cooled facilities cannot
touch. Three very different approaches from three companies
that agree on one thing: the old way of blowing cold air
through server rows has a ceiling, and the industry is about
to hit it.
Read more →
Schneider Electric ships cooling units packed with IoT
sensors that run predictive maintenance cycles before
failures happen. Iceotope has built immersion cooling
platforms that work across traditional, hyperscale, and edge
environments, pushing PUE numbers into territory that
air-cooled facilities cannot touch. Stulz leans on free
cooling and precise humidity control to shave CO2 output.
Three very different approaches from three companies that
agree on one thing: the old way of blowing cold air through
server rows has a ceiling, and the industry is about to hit
it.
The next shift is adaptive cooling, systems that use AI to
learn a facility's thermal behavior in real time and adjust
output to match actual load. Most data centers today
over-cool by 20 to 40% because their control systems react
to worst-case thresholds rather than live conditions.
Adaptive systems eliminate that cushion, and the energy
savings compound across thousands of racks.
Digital Realty introduced direct liquid cooling across
170 data centers
worldwide in 2024, signaling that the colocation giants see
liquid as table stakes rather than a premium add-on. Edge
computing adds another dimension. Smaller facilities in
distributed locations create opportunities for cooling
designs that would never make sense at hyperscale, from
geothermal loops to ambient-air setups in northern climates.
The vendors winning contracts right now are the ones who can
deliver across all three tiers: hyperscale, colo, and edge.
Single-product companies are getting boxed out.
Energy
March 5, 2026
Pull up satellite imagery of New Carlisle, Indiana, from 2023
and you see farmland. Pull it up today and you see seven
rectangular data centers with 23 more permitted. A single
campus there already draws over 500 megawatts, enough to power
several hundred thousand homes. When the full build finishes,
the load will exceed what two cities the size of Atlanta
consume.
Read more →
Pull up satellite imagery of New Carlisle, Indiana, from
2023 and you see farmland. Pull it up today and you see
seven rectangular data centers with 23 more permitted. A
single campus there already draws over 500 megawatts, enough
to power several hundred thousand homes. When the full build
finishes, the load will exceed what two cities the size of
Atlanta consume.
The Atlantic's Matteo Wong reported from these sites,
including Memphis, where a new data center megaproject sits
downwind from an active natural-gas plant in a neighborhood
already dealing with pollution from decades of industrial
use. KeShaun Pearson, who runs the nonprofit Memphis
Community Against Pollution, told Wong the area's air
already tastes like soot and asphalt. Another facility won't
improve things.
The numbers at a national level tell the same story.
U.S. data centers consumed 176 terawatt-hours in 2023, roughly 4.4% of total national electricity. Globally, the
figure hit 415 TWh in 2024 and is projected to double to 945
TWh by 2030. AI-related capital spending now accounts for
92% of GDP growth in the first half of 2025, and the tech
sector has ballooned from 22% to a third of the S&P 500
since ChatGPT launched. That concentration of economic
activity in a single sector, built on a single resource
constraint, should make anyone in infrastructure planning
pay attention.
Cooling is the bottleneck inside the bottleneck. Forty
percent of a data center's electricity goes to thermal
management. At the densities AI training requires, the
cooling problem scales faster than the compute problem.
Research
March 1, 2026
A comprehensive review published in the International Journal
of Refrigeration examined every major cooling optimization
technology available to data centers today. The headline
finding: advanced cooling architectures can cut energy
consumption by up to 67.2% compared to conventional setups.
The industry average PUE, according to
Uptime Institute's 2024 survey, sits at 1.56. State-of-the-art facilities report 1.06. That
gap represents billions of kilowatt-hours left on the table
every year.
Read more →
A comprehensive review published in the International
Journal of Refrigeration examined every major cooling
optimization technology available to data centers today. The
headline finding: advanced cooling architectures can cut
energy consumption by up to 67.2% compared to conventional
setups. The industry average PUE, according to
Uptime Institute's 2024 survey, sits at 1.56. State-of-the-art facilities report 1.06.
That gap represents billions of kilowatt-hours left on the
table every year.
The research breaks down where the waste lives. In a typical
data center, only 30% of electricity actually reaches the
servers doing useful work. The thermal management stack, air
conditioning, chillers, humidifiers, consumes 45%. The rest
goes to power distribution and overhead. Those proportions
have been roughly stable for years, which means the industry
has been building new capacity without fixing the
fundamental inefficiency of how it cools existing capacity.
Liquid cold plates, immersion tanks, heat pipes, and
thermosiphon-based systems all showed measurable PUE
improvements in the review.
AWS reported a 46% drop in mechanical cooling energy
after deploying a custom liquid solution, bringing its
global PUE to 1.15. Vertiv's data shows that moving to 75%
liquid cooling in a hybrid facility cuts total site power
consumption by 15.5%.
Microprocessor thermal design power is expected to blow past
700 watts this year. Air cooling tops out around 280 watts.
The arithmetic on when liquid becomes mandatory has already
been done. The only question is how many operators will wait
until they have no other option.
Funding
March 1, 2026
Lonestar Data Holdings has raised $66 million to develop data
center infrastructure on the lunar surface. The moon's far
side offers electromagnetic shielding and falls outside any
national jurisdiction. Lunar thermal cycling runs from 127°C
at noon to -173°C at night — the core engineering challenge
the program must solve before the first hardware ships.
Read more →
Regulation
February 26, 2026
Community opposition has stalled or killed
$64 billion worth of U.S. data center projects. That figure comes from Good Jobs First, which has been
tracking the growing collision between hyperscale ambitions
and local resistance since the buildout accelerated in 2024.
Read more →
Community opposition has stalled or killed
$64 billion worth of U.S. data center projects. That figure comes from Good Jobs First, which has been
tracking the growing collision between hyperscale ambitions
and local resistance since the buildout accelerated in 2024.
The opposition is not coming from environmentalists alone.
Homeowners worried about property values. Farmers who do not
want to sell to a land agent working for an unnamed tech
company. Municipal leaders watching their water tables drop.
School boards wondering why a $2 billion facility pays
almost nothing in property taxes thanks to abatement deals
negotiated behind closed doors.
New York's S.9144, introduced in early 2026, would impose a
three-year statewide pause on permits for data centers
drawing 20 megawatts or more. The bill has not passed its
originating chamber, but the fact that it was introduced in
one of the country's most important data center markets says
something about where the political winds are blowing.
Moratorium bills have been introduced in 11 states across 14
separate pieces of legislation in 2026. None have passed
yet. But the pattern is consistent: proposals are getting
more specific, the sponsors are getting more serious, and
the public comment periods are getting louder.
Over 300 data center bills were filed across more than 30
states in the first six weeks of 2026 legislative sessions.
The industry spent years operating in an incentive-friendly
regulatory environment. That environment is shifting.
Operators who plan multi-year construction timelines without
accounting for community opposition are building schedule
risk into every project.
Technology
February 22, 2026
Immersion cooling can hit a PUE of 1.02. Direct-to-chip liquid
cooling lands around 1.15 to 1.20. On raw thermal efficiency,
immersion wins. It has won that comparison for years. And yet
direct-to-chip holds 47% of the liquid cooling market while
immersion sits at roughly $270 million.
Read more →
Immersion cooling can hit a PUE of 1.02. Direct-to-chip
liquid cooling lands around 1.15 to 1.20. On raw thermal
efficiency, immersion wins. It has won that comparison for
years. And yet direct-to-chip holds
47% of the liquid cooling market
while immersion sits at roughly $270 million, growing at 25%
CAGR toward a projected $2.54 billion by 2032.
The gap between what works in a lab and what ships in volume
comes down to three things that have nothing to do with
thermodynamics.
Server compatibility is the first. Direct-to-chip cold
plates mount onto existing CPU and GPU packages inside
standard server chassis. Dell, HPE, and Lenovo all offer
factory-integrated DTC options. Immersion requires
purpose-built or heavily modified servers. Standard
components with standard connectors and standard cable
routing do not survive submersion in dielectric fluid.
Workforce readiness is the second. Most data center
operations teams have spent their careers managing
air-cooled environments. DTC adds manifolds, hoses, and
coolant distribution units. Immersion asks a maintenance
technician to pull a server out of a tank of fluid, let it
drain, service it, and resubmerge it.
Retrofit economics is the third. DTC fits into existing rack
infrastructure with manageable modifications. Immersion
requires tanks, fluid inventory, specialized containment,
and a fundamentally different floor layout. For the majority
of operators adding liquid cooling to facilities that were
built for air, DTC is the path that does not require gutting
the room.
Supply Chain
February 18, 2026
The data center liquid cooling market hit
$5.52 billion in December 2025. It is projected to reach $15.75 billion by 2030. That kind
of growth rate attracts everyone. The question is who can
actually manufacture at the scale the buildout demands.
Read more →
The data center liquid cooling market hit
$5.52 billion in December 2025. It is projected to reach $15.75 billion by 2030. That
kind of growth rate attracts everyone. The question is who
can actually manufacture at the scale the buildout demands.
Schneider Electric moved first among the industrial
conglomerates. Their acquisition of Motivair in February
2025 gave them a dedicated liquid cooling portfolio: coolant
distribution units, ChilledDoor rear-door heat exchangers,
dynamic cold plates, and chillers. Since the acquisition,
Motivair has opened a fourth production facility and is
tripling global manufacturing capacity across plants in
Buffalo, Italy, and India.
Vertiv has been in the cooling business longer than most of
its competitors have existed. Their rear-door heat
exchangers and CDU product lines are specified by default at
several major colocation providers.
Eaton's $9.5 billion acquisition of Boyd Thermal
was the largest pure-play cooling deal in data center
history. Boyd brings manufacturing depth in heat exchangers,
cold plates, and thermal interface materials. The
combination mirrors Schneider's strategy: own enough of the
cooling and power stack to sell integrated solutions.
Demand is running ahead of supply across CDUs, cold plates,
and rear-door heat exchangers. Lead times have stretched.
The vendors who can ship on schedule will capture market
share regardless of whose product benchmarks better on a
spec sheet.
Hardware
February 14, 2026
Every cooling technology decision being made in data centers
right now traces back to a single forcing function: how many
watts NVIDIA's next GPU generates. The H100 runs at 700 watts.
The Blackwell B200 pushes 1,000 watts. Rubin, the next
generation, is expected to climb higher.
Read more →
Every cooling technology decision being made in data centers
right now traces back to a single forcing function: how many
watts NVIDIA's next GPU generates. The H100 runs at 700
watts. The Blackwell B200 pushes 1,000 watts. Rubin, the
next generation, is expected to climb higher. Each step up
the power ladder compounds the thermal load per rack, per
row, per facility.
Air cooling tops out around 25 to 30 kW per rack. That
ceiling has not moved meaningfully in years and it will not
move meaningfully in the future. The physics of convective
heat transfer through air set a hard limit.
Non-AI workloads across the global data center fleet total
approximately 38 gigawatts.
AI workloads are expected to hit 44 GW in 2026. The crossover point, where AI thermal load exceeds
everything else combined, is arriving this year.
The cooling industry is, in effect, building to NVIDIA's
spec. When Jensen Huang announces a new chip architecture,
the thermal management implications ripple through CDU
manufacturers, cold plate suppliers, and facility designers
within weeks. The vendors who can design, qualify, and ship
cooling hardware matched to the next GPU generation before
that generation reaches volume production will own the
upgrade cycle.
Infrastructure
February 13, 2026
SpaceX's FCC filing for up to 1 million satellites frames
orbital data center infrastructure at a scale that dwarfs any
terrestrial buildout. Current Starlink sits at roughly 6,000
satellites. Getting from there to a viable orbital compute
constellation requires hitting a $10/kg launch cost target.
The economics, not the physics, are the binding constraint.
Read more →
Infrastructure
February 12, 2026
Starship's available capacity far exceeds what a Starlink
constellation requires — leaving room for xAI hardware
payloads. xAI burns roughly $1 billion per month; a $20
billion raise buys 18 months. Starlink's projected $100
billion in free cash flow by 2030 is the structural funding
mechanism for xAI's orbital ambitions.
Read more →
Funding
February 10, 2026
Frore Systems closed a
funding round that valued the company at $1.64 billion. The $143 million raise was led by MVP Ventures, with
participation from Fidelity and Qualcomm Ventures. The company
makes solid-state cooling devices. No fans. No moving fluids.
Read more →
Frore Systems closed a
funding round that valued the company at $1.64 billion. The $143 million raise was led by MVP Ventures, with
participation from Fidelity and Qualcomm Ventures.
The company makes solid-state cooling devices. No fans. No
moving fluids. Frore's AirJet technology uses piezoelectric
membranes that vibrate at ultrasonic frequencies to create
localized airflow directly over a chip surface. The data
center application extends the same principle to GPU and CPU
packages where targeted, high-velocity airflow can
supplement or replace broader cooling architectures.
A $1.64 billion valuation for a cooling component company is
extraordinary for this category. For context, the entire
immersion cooling segment is projected at $2.54 billion by
2032. Frore is valued at 65% of that projected market before
its data center product is widely deployed.
Whether AirJet technology scales to the thermal loads of a
1,000-watt Blackwell GPU remains to be demonstrated at
production volume. Frore does not need to replace liquid
cooling. It needs to prove that a chip-level supplement adds
enough thermal headroom to justify the per-unit cost. At
$1.64 billion, the market is betting it can.
Infrastructure
February 6, 2026
Two facilities opening in 2026 will answer the question that
the entire cooling industry has been arguing about: can you
cool a high-density data center without consuming water, in a
climate where you actually need cooling?
Read more →
Two facilities opening in 2026 will answer the question that
the entire cooling industry has been arguing about: can you
cool a high-density data center without consuming water, in
a climate where you actually need cooling?
Phoenix, Arizona is the first test. A zero-water pilot
project launching this year in a market where summer
temperatures regularly exceed 110 degrees Fahrenheit and the
municipal water supply depends on a Colorado River system
that has been in sustained decline for two decades. If
zero-water cooling works in Phoenix, it works everywhere in
the continental United States.
Mt. Pleasant, Wisconsin is the second. A facility designed
to operate without consumptive water use in a humid
Midwestern climate where the thermal challenge is different.
Humidity limits the effectiveness of certain dry cooling
approaches.
The technology stack for zero-water cooling is well
understood. Dry coolers, closed-loop liquid systems, and
heat rejection without evaporation. The tradeoff is capacity
and cost. Dry coolers sized for peak ambient temperatures in
Phoenix require two to three times the radiator surface area
and fan power than an equivalent evaporative system.
The results from these pilots will influence permitting
decisions, facility design standards, and vendor selection
for the next generation of builds. If zero-water performance
holds at commercially viable cost points, the argument for
new evaporative installations in water-stressed regions
collapses.
Infrastructure
February 5, 2026
Getting 2,000 tons of IT equipment into orbit costs over $200
billion at current launch prices. There is no robotic repair
capability for orbital hardware. Latency excludes financial
trading and gaming. A CEPA analysis maps the actual
engineering and economic barriers that orbital data center
advocates tend to skip over.
Read more →
Policy
February 5, 2026
CASC's five-year plan targets 2,800 satellites by 2030 and
1,000 petaflops of orbital compute capacity. China's 15th
Five-Year Plan includes space-based data centers as a
strategic infrastructure category. Production launches are
scheduled for 2027. The geopolitical framing of orbital
compute as national infrastructure is new and significant.
Read more →
Workforce
February 2, 2026
Ask a cooling vendor what slows down liquid cooling deployment
and you will hear about PUE, capex, and fluid compatibility.
Ask the operator who just signed a purchase order for 500
racks of direct-to-chip cooling and the answer is different.
They cannot find people who know how to install it.
Read more →
Ask a cooling vendor what slows down liquid cooling
deployment and you will hear about PUE, capex, and fluid
compatibility. Ask the operator who just signed a purchase
order for 500 racks of direct-to-chip cooling and the answer
is different. They cannot find people who know how to
install it, maintain it, and troubleshoot it when something
goes wrong.
The workforce skills gap is the single most cited
operational barrier to liquid cooling adoption in 2026. The
data center industry spent two decades building a labor
force trained on air-cooled infrastructure. CRAC units,
raised floors, hot-aisle/cold-aisle containment. Those
skills are mature and widely distributed.
Liquid cooling introduces an entirely different set of
competencies. Plumbing and fluid dynamics replace airflow
management. Leak detection systems require different
monitoring protocols. Cold plate connections at the server
level demand mechanical precision that a technician
accustomed to swapping fans and filters has never been asked
to deliver.
Some operators are solving this by partnering directly with
cooling vendors for managed maintenance. Others are
investing in internal training programs, pulling from
adjacent trades like HVAC, plumbing, and industrial process
cooling where the mechanical skills overlap.
The vendors who bundle training and certification into their
sales process will have an advantage that does not show up
on a spec sheet. The cooling hardware market has multiple
credible suppliers. The cooling labor market does not have
enough credible technicians. That imbalance will shape
purchasing decisions as much as price or performance.
Funding
January 13, 2026
Accelsius closed a $65 million Series B led by Johnson
Controls International, with Legrand joining as a strategic
investor. Johnson Controls — which also runs the Silent-Aire
CDU platform and YORK YVAM chiller line — is not hedging
against its own product line. It is ensuring it has a position
in every modality that matters. The DarkNX deployment
agreement for a 300-megawatt campus in Ontario is the
commercial reference point anchoring the round.
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Infrastructure
October 4, 2025
At Italian Tech Week, Jeff Bezos laid out the case for
gigawatt-scale data centers in orbit: no clouds, no rain, no
weather, effectively unlimited solar power. He named AI
training as the target workload. Blue Origin's New Glenn is
the infrastructure bet underlying the claim. The terrestrial
cooling industry has 10 to 20 years to make the economics of
ground-based facilities look better than what he's describing.
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Infrastructure
July 15, 2025
Hines acquired the Titusville Logistics Center on Florida's
Space Coast. Ethos is developing lunar cement from
anorthosite. ICON is 3D-printing structures for NASA. The
vacancy rate for national warehouse space sits at 8.5%, but
the strategic bets being placed near launch infrastructure
signal where the smart money thinks compute demand is heading.
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