Vast capital expenditure on Artificial Intelligence infrastructure by the largest US technology companies is reshaping where and how data centres are built. In 2025 those companies spent more on Artificial Intelligence than the US government spent on education, training, employment and social services, with most spending concentrated on data centres and specialised chips. Data centres consume large quantities of power and sometimes water, and tech firms are securing supply through hybrid partnerships with energy companies and investments in new nuclear and off-grid renewables. The UK has joined the same race, though on a smaller scale and often led by US firms, creating pressure on national electricity networks.
The immediate constraint in the UK is the capacity of the National Grid. Modern Artificial Intelligence data facilities are much larger than traditional centres: decades ago large sites used 2 to 4 megawatts, today the biggest UK site runs at 120 megawatts, and planned Artificial Intelligence facilities are expected to start at 500 megawatts and could reach gigawatt scale. Few places can currently deliver that power and lead times for grid upgrades can be many years. High wholesale and retail electricity prices in the UK, skewed by gas, make it harder to compete with regions that can supply large amounts of cheap renewable energy. The government has proposed Artificial Intelligence Growth Zones in the AI Opportunities Action Plan (January 2025) offering streamlined planning and a pledge to work with network operators to provide 500 megawatts plus of power per zone, though new centres still require at least five years to build.
Another technical limit is rack density. Where pre‑Artificial Intelligence racks averaged 8 kilowatts, some current Artificial Intelligence racks run at 50 kilowatts and top-end Nvidia systems need more than 120 kilowatts per rack. Nvidia has indicated the next generation could require about 600 kilowatts per rack, creating a packaging and cooling challenge. The UK strategy combines directing growth to places with ready power, major grid investment and regulatory reforms to speed connections. Microsoft has warned that without swift upgrades some UK data centres may wait until the mid‑2030s for full power. The government’s Plan for Change and measures such as new substations and guaranteed zone capacity aim to address the bottlenecks so Britain can realise its Artificial Intelligence ambitions.