Data Centers Are Turning to Onsite Power Sources to Address 35 GW Energy Gap by 2030
January 21 2025 - 9:00AM
Business Wire
According to New Power Report, AI Needs Are
Driving Data Centers to Adopt Energy Sources Beyond The Grid
As the energy needs of data centers continue to significantly
outpace supply, a new report from Bloom Energy (NYSE: BE), a global
leader in power solutions, predicts that 35 GW of data center
capacity will be announced within the next five years — equivalent
to over six times the average energy capacity used by New York City
annually. To meet the soaring demand, data centers are adopting
onsite power systems as a primary energy source, a shift that
reflects the industry’s drive for innovative solutions to address
economic imperatives and ease pressure on the nation’s aging power
grid.
The 2025 Data Center Power Report surveyed approximately 100
data center leaders who make decisions about power systems
architecture and explored actions they are taking to address the
time-to-power challenge.
Key highlights include:
- In the U.S., an additional 55 GW of data center IT capacity is
expected to come online in the next five years (vs. the 25 GW of
existing capacity today). Approximately 20 GW of capacity has been
announced to date.
- Data center leaders are taking responsibility for their power
needs: approximately 30% of all sites are expected to use onsite
power as a primary energy source by 2030 — more than double the
percentage reported just seven months earlier.
- Decision makers are now prioritizing new factors like
time-to-power and the ability to support more demanding and
fluctuating AI workloads, reflecting a shift beyond traditional
drivers of cost and reliability.
“We see AI and cloud computing driving explosive growth in data
center demand, and power availability remains the major
bottleneck," said Aman Joshi, Bloom Energy’s Chief Commercial
Officer. "The 2025 Data Center Power Report reveals that a growing
number of data center leaders are turning to onsite power as a
primary energy source. This underscores what we’re hearing from
customers: they feel the urgency to address economic imperatives
while ensuring reliable, scalable energy solutions." Joshi noted
that customers emphasized developing onsite power arrangements in
close collaboration with utilities.
According to survey participants, access to power is expected to
get more challenging. Public announcements of onsite power
deployments have grown rapidly and indicate growth across
technologies including fuel cells, which are gaining traction.
The 2025 Data Center Power Report is based on data collected
from April to November 2024. Survey respondents represent both
cloud service providers, or hyperscalers, as well as single- and
multi-tenant data center developers. To add depth to the survey
findings, Bloom Energy also commissioned interviews with key
decision-makers and reviewed research from multiple external data
sources including Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, McKinsey
& Company, and Goldman Sachs.
A copy of the Bloom Energy Data Center Power report is available
here.
About Bloom Energy
Bloom Energy empowers businesses and communities to responsibly
take charge of their energy. The company’s leading solid oxide
platform for distributed generation of electricity and hydrogen is
changing the future of energy. Fortune 100 companies around the
world turn to Bloom Energy as a trusted partner to deliver lower
carbon energy today and a net-zero future. For more information,
visit www.bloomenergy.com.
Forward-Looking Statements
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which are subject to the safe harbor provisions of the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking
statements generally relate to future events or our future
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strategy, priorities, plans, or intentions. These forward-looking
statements include, but are not limited to, HPS and IDF’s
acquisition of Bloom Energy Servers, funding of installation of
Bloom equipment, new sources of capital, and Bloom’s ability to
provide financed solutions without impacting capital budgets.
Readers are cautioned that these forward-looking statements are
only predictions and may differ materially from actual future
events or results due to a variety of factors, including risks and
uncertainties detailed in Bloom’s SEC filings. More information on
potential risks and uncertainties that may impact Bloom’s business
are set forth in Bloom’s periodic reports filed with the SEC,
including its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2023, filed with the SEC on February 15, 2024, its
Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarters ended March 31,
2024, June 30, 2024, and September 30, 2024, filed with the SEC on
May 9, 2024, August 8, 2024, and November 7, 2024, respectively, as
well as subsequent reports filed with or furnished to the SEC.
Bloom assumes no obligation to, and does not intend to, update any
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Media Bloom Energy – Katja Gagen,
press@bloomenergy.com
Investors Bloom Energy – Michael Tierney
(investor@bloomenergy.com)
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