AI Data Centers Poised to Outpace Traditional Servers in Power Consumption by 2027

2026-07-09

Data centers are ravenous consumers of energy, a fact often downplayed by major artificial intelligence developers. Despite claims minimizing the power needed for individual AI tasks, the expansion of AI infrastructure by leading tech companies is set to further exacerbate the energy demands of these facilities.

Forecasts indicate a substantial increase in global data center electricity consumption, with projections showing a rise from 447 terawatt-hours in 2025 to 565 terawatt-hours in 2026. This represents a significant 26% year-over-year growth, as detailed in Gartner's recent analysis. Furthermore, global data center power demand is anticipated to climb 27% this year, potentially reaching 132 gigawatts, up from 104 GW in 2025. Experts predict this upward trend will continue, with demand possibly exceeding 290 GW by 2030.

Linglan Wang, a Director Analyst at Gartner, highlights that the escalating need for compute-intensive AI applications is fueling unprecedented growth in data center power usage. She notes that AI capacity is now limited by available power, making energy security a critical factor in the competitive race to scale AI technologies and safeguard profit margins.

Gartner estimates that AI-optimized servers will account for 31% of data center power consumption this year, following an impressive 84.2% growth. By 2027, the energy requirements of AI servers are projected to surpass those of conventional servers, which saw a modest 1.2% growth in 2026 and are expected to increase by 2.4% in 2027. This trend aligns with Google's own environmental reports, which show an exponential increase in the company's energy consumption, nearly reaching 10% of Gartner's total global figures last year. Compounding these issues, approximately 80% of the world's data centers are located in suboptimal climates, necessitating substantial energy expenditure for temperature regulation. Gartner reports that power consumption for 'Cooling and other Infrastructure' within data centers is expected to grow by 22.6% in 2026, adding to the environmental concerns and taxing local power grids.

The escalating energy demands of AI-driven data centers present a critical challenge. Addressing this requires a concerted effort toward energy efficiency, the adoption of renewable energy sources, and strategic planning for data center placement to mitigate environmental impact and ensure grid stability. Proactive measures are essential to foster a sustainable technological future while supporting innovation.