International Power Plays

With great power comes great responsibility. But in the age of artificial intelligence (AI), power means megawatts, not metaphors.

As AI models grow more complex, their hunger for computational power is reshaping energy priorities far beyond American borders. Data centers’ electricity consumption has been surging, thanks to exploding demand for AI. A single 100-megawatt data center can consume as much power as 100,000 households. According to the International Energy Agency, global power use from data centers is estimated to have reached 415 terawatt-hours (TWh) in 2024, more than double the level in 2015. That’s already more than the entire electricity usage of France, and demand is expected to double within five years.

The question is no longer whether demand will rise, it’s how fast, and whether power systems can keep up.

China accounted for roughly a fourth of global data center electricity consumption in 2024, second only to the United States. Yet its dominance in clean energy puts the country on uniquely strong footing in the global AI race. Today, coal still powers over 70% of China’s data centers, but renewables contribute about 20%. While coal remains a near-term crutch, Beijing’s aggressive solar and wind targets position China well for the AI era. Over the next decade, renewables and nuclear are expected to supply about 60% of data center electricity. China’s manufacturing edge, producing 80% of the world’s solar panels and 60% of wind turbines at lower costs than the West, gives it a strategic advantage in pivoting toward clean energy and sustaining AI growth.

The Nordics are better placed than most within Europe, thanks to cheap and abundant power from nuclear, hydro, wind and solar sources. With nearly 100% renewable electricity, a naturally cool climate, and some of the lowest energy prices in Europe, Nordic nations offer a compelling mix of sustainability and scale.

Elsewhere in Europe, the picture is more complex. Climate targets, sustainability mandates and aging grids clash with soaring AI energy demand. In hubs like Dublin and Frankfurt, the process of securing and delivering electrical capacity can stretch up to five years, with equipment delays alone often surpassing three years. Ireland is a cautionary tale: data centers could consume nearly a third of its electricity by 2030. The EU is projected to need over $1 trillion in grid investment this decade to keep pace. Meeting data center demand will be important if Europe is to unleash AI’s full economic potential and enhance productivity growth. The EU’s response thus far has been to introduce caps on data center energy use and to enact strict sustainability mandates.