AI and Cloud Computing Fuel Global Data Centre Construction Boom
ECONOMY & POLICY

AI and Cloud Computing Fuel Global Data Centre Construction Boom

A new report by Allianz Commercial reveals that global spending on data centres could reach several trillion US dollars by 2030, driven by the explosive growth of AI and cloud computing. The US and China are leading this global construction boom, while Europe continues to expand at a steady pace.

According to the report, The Data Center Construction Boom, project costs have risen dramatically — from $200–300 million to more than $20 billion — as developers race to meet surging demand for high-performance computing infrastructure. The average facility now costs between $500 million and $2 billion.

“Such large and complex projects require project-specific insurance policies tailored to their unique risk profiles,” said Darren Tasker, Head of Construction, Americas, Allianz Commercial.

The US accounts for nearly two-thirds of global power demand from data centres, with 81 GW expected by 2028. China’s market is expanding rapidly, with Greater Beijing alone representing about 10 per cent of global hyperscale capacity. Europe, led by London and Dublin, is seeing a 43 per cent annual rise in pipeline activity.

The report notes that growing power demand could outpace grid capacity, with global electricity usage by data centres expected to more than double by 2030, equivalent to Japan’s current consumption. Other risks include fire hazards from lithium-ion batteries, water usage, and cooling challenges in hotter climates.

In Asia Pacific, the data centre market accounts for 30% of global capacity and is expected to grow at 21 per cent CAGR through 2028, with strong momentum in India, Malaysia, and Indonesia.

“All stakeholders must understand and manage the evolving risks — from construction and environmental impact to cybersecurity,” said Christian Sandric, Regional Managing Director, Allianz Commercial Asia. “Specialised insurance and risk management expertise are crucial to supporting this rapid global expansion.”

A new report by Allianz Commercial reveals that global spending on data centres could reach several trillion US dollars by 2030, driven by the explosive growth of AI and cloud computing. The US and China are leading this global construction boom, while Europe continues to expand at a steady pace. According to the report, The Data Center Construction Boom, project costs have risen dramatically — from $200–300 million to more than $20 billion — as developers race to meet surging demand for high-performance computing infrastructure. The average facility now costs between $500 million and $2 billion. “Such large and complex projects require project-specific insurance policies tailored to their unique risk profiles,” said Darren Tasker, Head of Construction, Americas, Allianz Commercial. The US accounts for nearly two-thirds of global power demand from data centres, with 81 GW expected by 2028. China’s market is expanding rapidly, with Greater Beijing alone representing about 10 per cent of global hyperscale capacity. Europe, led by London and Dublin, is seeing a 43 per cent annual rise in pipeline activity. The report notes that growing power demand could outpace grid capacity, with global electricity usage by data centres expected to more than double by 2030, equivalent to Japan’s current consumption. Other risks include fire hazards from lithium-ion batteries, water usage, and cooling challenges in hotter climates. In Asia Pacific, the data centre market accounts for 30% of global capacity and is expected to grow at 21 per cent CAGR through 2028, with strong momentum in India, Malaysia, and Indonesia. “All stakeholders must understand and manage the evolving risks — from construction and environmental impact to cybersecurity,” said Christian Sandric, Regional Managing Director, Allianz Commercial Asia. “Specialised insurance and risk management expertise are crucial to supporting this rapid global expansion.”

Next Story
Real Estate

RBI Rate Cut Boosts Confidence Across Housing Market

Industry Context and Market DynamicsThe real estate industry has welcomed the RBI’s rate cut as a timely boost to affordability and demand. With home prices having risen steadily across major markets, even a marginal reduction in interest rates meaningfully strengthens purchasing power, especially for first-time and mid-income buyers.Ashish Jerath, President – Sales & Marketing, Smartworld Developers, observes:“The RBI’s 25-basis-point cut, bringing the repo rate down to 5.25%, is a timely boost for the real estate sector. Lower interest rates reduce borrowing costs, enabling homeb..

Next Story
Infrastructure Transport

BMC Resumes Rs 170 Billion Road Works, Targets 80 per cent By Jan 2026

Following the withdrawal of the southwest monsoon in October, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has restarted work on 645 roads—covering 297.49 kilometres—under its large-scale concretisation programme. Data shows that more than 60 per cent of the resumed works are located in the western suburbs. Officials said the civic body aims to complete concretisation on 80 per cent of the roads where fresh work has begun by January 2026. Launched in 2022, the Rs 170 billion project seeks to concretise 700 kilometres of roads across Mumbai. All civil works were halted during the monsoon ..

Next Story
Infrastructure Urban

India Pushes Digital Shift In Urban Land Mapping

The Department of Land Resources (DoLR) under the Ministry of Rural Development has convened a National Symposium on NAKSHA – the National Geospatial Knowledge-based Land Survey of Urban Habitations – to advance India’s transition to modern, technology-driven land mapping. Speaking at the inaugural session, Secretary Manoj Joshi underscored the urgent need to move revenue departments away from outdated, tape-based methods and rough hand-drawn sketches. He stressed that adopting latitude–longitude-based digital mapping and GIS-linked registration systems is essential for economic stabi..

Advertisement

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get daily newsletters around different themes from Construction world.

STAY CONNECTED

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Open In App