All Content from Business Insider 09月22日
电力稀缺背景下的数据中心并购战
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

文章聚焦当前数据中心行业因电力供应不足而引发的并购热潮。Core Scientific面临Core Weave提出的90亿美元收购要约,但遭大股东反对,凸显电力成为AI竞赛中的关键瓶颈。数据中心对算力和存储至关重要,其运营需要巨大的电力支持,而全国电网已难以满足激增的需求。拥有电力资源或能快速获取电力的数据中心平台因此价值飙升,成为投资者追逐的对象。文章指出,电力供应的限制已开始影响数据中心的扩张,并预测未来电力需求将远超供应,使得电力成为数据中心开发的关键制约因素。

⚡️ **电力成为AI竞赛中的核心稀缺资源:** 文章指出,数据中心是AI发展所需算力和存储的基础设施,而其运营需要消耗巨量电力。当前,全国电网的供电能力难以满足激增的数据中心用电需求,导致电力成为AI基础设施建设中的关键瓶颈,掌握电力资源或能快速获取电力成为数据中心平台的巨大优势。

💰 **数据中心并购交易活跃,电力是关键考量因素:** 在电力稀缺的背景下,拥有稳定且低成本电力资源的数据中心公司价值凸显。Core Scientific作为一家从加密货币挖矿公司转型的数据中心企业,因其电力资源而成为90亿美元收购目标。投资者在评估并购对象时,越来越看重其电力供应能力和未来电力获取的潜力,这直接影响了交易的估值和成功率。

📉 **电力供应限制数据中心扩张,行业面临严峻挑战:** 尽管对数据中心的需求强劲增长,但电力供应的不足已开始抑制新建数据中心的建设速度。报告显示,主要市场的在建数据中心数量出现下滑,并非因为需求不足,而是由于公用事业供电的短缺。这种电力限制正迫使行业寻求更偏远地区或开发新的电力解决方案。

📈 **行业预测电力需求远超供应,高价值投资机遇并存:** 咨询公司预测,到2030年,数据中心电力需求将是目前的数倍,投资额将达数万亿美元。尽管面临电力瓶颈,数据中心行业仍吸引着大量机构投资,并购交易额屡创新高。然而,电力短缺将是未来几年最紧迫的挑战,也为拥有电力资源的企业带来了巨大的投资机遇。

Assets with access to power are increasingly valuable

In the span of less than two years, Core Scientific went from a bankrupt crypto mining company to a $9 billion acquisition target. How? By reinventing itself as an upstart player in the artificial intelligence-driven data center craze.

Only now, one of the company's largest shareholders is urging other investors to vote down the deal — arguing that $9 billion isn't nearly enough.

While a takeover battle between little-known data center firms might seem like an industry footnote, it speaks volumes about the vast infrastructure arms race taking place behind the AI boom.

Data centers provide the computing and storage necessary for AI, and operating them requires city-sized loads of electricity.

This and other rising power demands have outstripped the ability of grids nationwide to keep up, lifting the fortunes of data center platforms like Core Scientific that have access to electricity and the rights to contract more in the near term.

"There is a lot of value in being able to secure power and surmount the roadblock that everyone in the industry is facing, which is access to power," said Kevin Dede, an equity analyst at H.C. Wainwright who covers Core Scientific.

A $9 billion M&A deal on the rocks

In July, CoreWeave, a roughly $60 billion publicly owned data center company, announced that it had reached an agreement with Core Scientific to merge in an all-stock transaction that, at the time, valued Core Scientific at roughly $9 billion.

But in early September, one of Core Scientific's largest shareholders released a draft proxy letter urging stock owners to vote against the merger because it wasn't lucrative enough.

Among the chief attributes that shareholder, the investment firm Two Seas Capital, ascribed to Core Scientific was its portfolio of power.

"Core Scientific has a critical first-mover advantage, significant scale and ready access to low-cost power, which we believe positions the company to emerge as a clear leader and compound growth for years to come," it states in its letter.

The merger, which Dede said is now "in peril," would expand CoreWeave's existing capacity to more than 2 gigawatts, about a third of the electrical capacity of New York City on an average day.

In a statement about the merger, a CoreWeave spokeswoman said that the company is "confident in securing the approvals necessary to complete the acquisition of Core Scientific" and that the deal will "strengthen our ability to meet the extraordinary demand we see."

A recent industry report suggests that limited access to power is already weighing down data center expansion. Commercial real estate services firm CBRE said that roughly 5.2 gigawatts of new data centers were underway in prime US markets in the first half of 2025, a 17.5% decline in the industry's construction pipeline from the same period a year prior.

Pat Lynch, the global head of CBRE's data center solutions team, said the decrease was due mainly to the scarcity of electricity.

"It is not a lack of demand, it's a lack of supply, specifically utility power," Lynch said. "Absent of power and equipment limitations, that supply delivery number would be significantly higher."

Enormous growth and a premium on electrons

The consulting firm McKinsey estimates that there will be 80 gigawatts of demand for data centers by 2030, a more than threefold increase from today, and that $2.8 trillion will be spent on data center development by the end of the decade.

The industry's dramatic growth has enchanted institutional investors.

John Dinsdale, the chief analyst and research director at Synergy Research Group, a data firm that tracks the data center industry, said that $46.1 billion of data center merger and acquisition deals have closed in 2025, and that $34 billion more is pending. If all of the pending deals were to close by the end of the year, 2025 would set a record for data center deals by dollar volume.

Major investors are picking acquisition targets with hefty portfolios of gigawattage.

Apollo recently announced it had acquired a majority interest in the prominent data center company Stream, stating that the company "controls over 4 gigawatts."

Investors Snowhawk and Nuveen announced in July that they had purchased an undisclosed stake in Prime, another notable data center operator. The announcement said that Prime has a "4 gigawatt roadmap of power across top-tier markets" with more than a gigawatt "deliverable between 2025 and 2028."

Biff Ourso, Nuveen's global head of infrastructure, said that power was a key attribute the firm looks for in the data center deals it pursues, including the transaction with Prime.

"It's a critical piece of the equation for us: what is the development pipeline and what is the contracted power," Ourso said. "Access to powered land for development, that is the big gating issue for the industry today."

In a report, Goldman Sachs said that despite the swell of new data center development, supply will lag demand by about 10% per year through 2028, in part because of the grid constraints.

"A lack of capital is not the most pressing bottleneck for AI progress — it's the power needed to fuel it," Dan Dees, the co-head of global banking and markets at the bank, wrote in the report.

The scarcity of electricity has also pushed more players to farther flung areas of the country that haven't traditionally seen a lot of data center development

In June, Applied Digital, a data center developer, announced that CoreWeave had agreed to lease 250 megawatts of space at a facility Applied Digital is building in Ellendale, North Dakota, with a right to expand its operations at the campus by 150 megawatts.

By August, Applied Digital announced that Coreweave had triggered that expansion option.

"In my mind, it's illustrative of the intense demands across the industry and how competitive it is," Dede said of the CoreWeave's decision to grow in Ellendale.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

数据中心 AI 电力供应 并购 Core Scientific CoreWeave 基础设施 Data Centers AI Power Supply Mergers and Acquisitions Infrastructure
相关文章