- Alternative investment manager is leaning into data centers
- Operators of the facilities looking for new power sources
Soaring demand for data centers to support artificial intelligence and cloud-computing will boost global spending in the sector to $250 billion a year, according to KKR & Co.
The US is the biggest developer of data centers. That infrastructure consumes about 16 to 18 gigawatts of power, compared with about 6 gigawatts each in Europe and Asia, Waldemar Szlezak, KKR’s global head of digital infrastructure, said in an interview. For comparison, 1 gigawatt is enough to supply more than 850,000 average US households.
“Over the next three to four years, the 18 gigawatts will likely double, if not triple,” he said.
The alternative asset manager announced this week that it had entered into a $50 billion partnership with Energy Capital Partners to accelerate the development of AI infrastructure. They plan to focus on developing data centers as well as power generation and transmission infrastructure. KKR’s capital will come from existing investment vehicles across infrastructure, real estate, credit and insurance, Szlezak said.
The firm’s competitors are also betting big on data centers.
Since snapping up data center operator QTS in 2021, Blackstone Inc., the world’s biggest alternative asset manager, has been bankrolling the development of the massive structures. Earlier this year, Brookfield Asset Management Ltd. said in an investor presentation that it has more than 140 data centers, putting it at the “forefront of the AI revolution.” And BlackRock Inc. said in September that it’s teaming up with Microsoft Corp. to raise $30 billion to build out data warehouses necessary to power advances in AI.
KKR started investing in data centers about five years ago, and its first deal was to acquire data-center developer and operator CyrusOne Inc. The buyout firm has held discussions with technology and power firms and utilities about other potential tie-ups, Szlezak said.
“We saw increasing need for data centers globally,” he said. “We’ve been very much leaning into the sector.”
Data-center operators are increasingly looking to guarantee that they have access to power, as opposed to the prior “just-in-time” model, Szlezak said. Hyperscalers, or large-scale data centers, will need to invest more in generation and transmission, he said.
Purchase power agreements to support the build-out of power plants fueled by natural gas are likely to emerge, which would be a pivot as such long-term off-take agreements typically have been used for wind, solar or even nuclear projects. These gas generators may require the construction of lateral lines to tap fuel from larger pipelines, and then there will likely have to be a way to store gas on site to ensure there’s available supply in extreme grid conditions, Szlezak said.
— With assistance from Simon Casey
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