Power Infrastructure Analysis
China has significantly more slack in its power grid, with massive overcapacity that can be directed toward AI data centers. The US faces grid constraints that limit rapid AI infrastructure scaling.
Key Metrics
Available Capacity = Dispatchable surplus after reserves + operational constraints
Net Added GW = New nuclear capacity commissioned − retirements
What matters in this layer
Power availability sets the ceiling for AI compute scaling. Permitting, grid capacity, and generation mix determine what can actually be built and operated.
Delays for new large loads and generation create a practical ceiling even when projects are funded and equipment exists.
AI clusters need predictable, high-uptime power. Dispatchable capacity and grid stability matter more than annual averages.
Permitting, transmission buildout, and supply chains for transformers and switchgear set the pace of scaling.
Compute wants cheap power and cooling, but constraints are local. Regional bottlenecks can dominate national totals.
Available grid capacity for AI data centers
A compact visual that turns surplus dispatchable capacity into discrete units. Each bolt represents 10 GW.
Net annual nuclear capacity added
A discrete count of net additions (commissioned minus retirements). Each node represents 10 GW.
China's Grid Overcapacity Enables AI Expansion
China's massive investment in power generation has created significant overcapacity, with an estimated 400 GW of slack that can be rapidly deployed for AI data centers without major grid upgrades.
US Data Center Expansion Faces Grid Bottlenecks
Major US hyperscalers report waiting times of 3-5 years for new power connections, with some projects delayed due to insufficient grid capacity in key regions.
Nuclear Power Revival for AI
Several US tech companies are exploring partnerships with nuclear power providers to secure reliable, carbon-free electricity for AI data centers. Microsoft has signed a deal to restart Three Mile Island.
China Adds 350 GW of New Capacity Annually
China's annual power capacity additions dwarf all other nations combined, with a mix of coal, renewables, and nuclear providing the foundation for continued AI infrastructure growth.