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Received today β€” 2 April 2026

Metro Connect USA 2026 Highlights the Future of U.S. Digital Infrastructure

16 March 2026 at 16:00

Metro Connect USA 2026 brought the digital infrastructure community together in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Feb. 23 to 25, as executives, investors and network operators gathered to discuss the evolving connectivity landscape. Over three days, conversations across keynote sessions, panels and private meetings focused on how the industry is adapting to the rapid growth of artificial intelligence, cloud services and bandwidth demand.

The 2026 event drew more than 3,700 decision-makers representing over 1,200 companies, reflecting the scale of collaboration and investment shaping the next phase of digital infrastructure development in the United States.

Artificial intelligence was a central theme throughout the conference. Industry leaders discussed how AI workloads are driving new requirements for data center capacity, fiber connectivity and power infrastructure. As AI adoption expands beyond hyperscale environments into enterprise applications and edge deployments, operators are facing increasing pressure to scale networks capable of supporting high-volume data movement and compute-intensive workloads.

Fiber infrastructure also remained a key topic. Discussions throughout the event highlighted continued investment in metro fiber expansion, long-haul backbone routes and fiber-to-the-home networks. As cloud platforms, streaming services and AI applications generate greater data traffic, fiber continues to serve as the underlying foundation supporting the digital economy.

Several speakers addressed how infrastructure and investment strategies are evolving alongside these shifts. Marc Ganzi, Chief Executive Offer at DigitalBridge discussed the continued influx of capital into digital infrastructure and the importance of disciplined investment as the sector scales. Steve Smith, Chief Executive Officer at Zayo Group highlighted the role of fiber expansion in supporting enterprise connectivity and hyperscale demand. Alex Hernandez, CEO of PowerBridge, participated in discussions focused on the growing power demands associated with AI infrastructure, including how utilities, data center developers and investors are working to expand power capacity and modernize energy delivery to support large-scale computing environments.

From the investment perspective, Santhosh Rao, Managing Director, Head of Digital Infrastructure at MUFG explored the evolving capital structures supporting infrastructure development, including structured financing and private credit solutions. Anton Moldan, Senior Managing Director at Macquarie Group shared insights into how institutional investors continue to evaluate digital infrastructure assets as a long-term growth opportunity within global infrastructure portfolios.

Beyond the formal sessions, Metro Connect remains known for its highly productive networking environment. Thousands of meetings took place across the event’s exhibit floor, private meeting rooms and curated networking gatherings, reinforcing the conference’s reputation as a place where partnerships are formed and transactions begin.

Outside the formal sessions, attendees spent much of the week engaged in meetings and informal discussions across the venue’s networking areas. Many participants noted that the event continues to serve as a gathering point for companies exploring partnerships, investment opportunities and infrastructure projects.

Looking ahead, the industry will reconvene next year as Metro Connect USA 2027 moves to a new venue. The event will take place February 8–10, 2027 at the Diplomat Beach Resort in Hollywood, Florida.

The post Metro Connect USA 2026 Highlights the Future of U.S. Digital Infrastructure appeared first on Data Center POST.

Nebraska advances energy storage and data centre-focused bill

24 March 2026 at 11:34
The legislative body of Nebraska, US, has advanced a bill to clarify and expand the state’s use of battery energy storage systems (BESS).

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Winter Storms Wreak Havoc β€” Blame Fossil Fuels, Not Renewables

2 February 2026 at 17:47

Weather is big news these days, and winter storms make for great clickbait. (Okay, I’ll admit that I’m a bit culpable here.) The US Eastern seaboard is in the midst of a rolling series of winter storms β€” wind, ice, sleet, and snow have caused upheavals in communities. Sure, the ... [continued]

The post Winter Storms Wreak Havoc β€” Blame Fossil Fuels, Not Renewables appeared first on CleanTechnica.

US Governors in PJM territory move to unlock renewable energy, energy storage investment

2 February 2026 at 12:52
The Governors of Maryland and New Jersey have enacted legislation to accelerate the deployment of clean energy technologies in response to energy cost and supply concerns.

Jupiter Power closes US$500 million corporate credit facility to support US BESS projects

30 January 2026 at 13:36
US battery energy storage system (BESS) developer-operator Jupiter Power has closed a US$500 million senior secured green revolving loan and letter of credit facility to support the advancement of its project pipeline across the US.

How energy storage can help data centres reduce their grid impact

29 January 2026 at 14:12
β€œWe see energy storage as an opportunity for (data centres) to reduce their impact on the grid”, said Patrick Hughes, Senior VP of Operations and Strategy at NEMA.

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