Liuzixuan Lin, Rajini Wijayawardana, Varsha Rao, Hai Nguyen, Emmanuel Wedan GNIBGA, Andrew A. Chien
The unprecedented rapid growth of computing demand for AI is projected to increase global annual datacenter (DC) growth from 7.2% to 11.3%. We project the 5-year AI DC demand for several power grids and assess whether they will allow desired AI growth (resource adequacy). If not, several “desperate measures”—grid policies that enable more load growth and maintain grid reliability by sacrificing new DC reliability are considered.
We find that two DC hotspots—EirGrid (Ireland) and Dominion (US)—will have difficulty accommodating new DCs needed by the AI growth. In EirGrid, relaxing new DC reliability guarantees increases the power available to 1.6x–4.1x while maintaining 99.6% actual power availability for the new DCs, sufficient for the 5-year AI demand. In Dominion, relaxing reliability guarantees increases available DC capacity similarly (1.5x–4.6x) but not enough for the 5-year AI demand. New DCs only receive 89% power availability. Study of other US power grids—SPP, CAISO, ERCOT—shows that sufficient capacity exists for the projected AI load growth.
Our results suggest the need to rethink adequacy assessment and also grid planning and management. New research opportunities include coordinated planning, reliability models that incorporate load flexibility, and adaptive load abstractions.