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Saudi Arabia pivots NEOM ‘gigaproject’ to AI data centre hub

Saudi Arabia is reportedly preparing to scale back NEOM, its marquee ‘gigaproject’ on the Red Sea, with it instead looking to develop an AI data centre hub instead.

According to unnamed sources cited by a report in the Financial Times, Saudi Arabia will scale back its hugely ambitious NEOM megaproject to create a new livable region in the desert in the northwest of the country, on the Red Sea coast. The project was announced in 2017 by Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman and was a cornerstone of his Vision 2030. It was to cover about 26,500 square km, roughly the size of Belgium (see map below).

The image above, from 27 October 2024, shows Sindalah, a luxury island destination and the first physical showcase of NEOM.

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NEOM was due for completion in 2030 and included plans for a city called The Line – a row of 500m tall skyscrapers stretching for some 200km. However NEOM suffered many delays and cost overruns, as well as criticism for potential environmental damage and being unrealistic, among other things.

In addition, Saudi Arabia is hosting the Expo international trade fair in 2030 and the football World Cup in 2034, both of which involve large scale investment. Work on NEOM was paused in 2025 while the government looked at its options in a year-long review which is scheduled to conclude in this quarter.

According to a report in the Financial Times, focus for the region will be more on industry, such as becoming a hub for data centres. Its location means sea water can be used for cooling and the Crown Prince is keen to make his country a leader in AI infrastructure – a hub for data centres to power AI – to attract inward investment and high profile international partners.

An unnamed source cited by the FT said the location had other advantages too, such as digital infrastructure and its position at the crossroad of three continents (Africa, Asia and Europe), plus almost limitless renewable energy and available land.

It’s not the first time NEOM has been touted as potentially playing host to data centres, with DataVolt committing $5 billion DataVolt to develop a new 1.5 GW net zero AI campus at NEOM’s Oxagon. That was expected to come online in 2028, but it’s unknown if it’ll be impacted by the planned rethink for the NEOM area.

This article originally appeared on Mobile Europe, with additional commentary from Data Centre Review.

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We’re going On the Record with a new column series

Data Centre Review is launching a new monthly column series, dubbed On the Record, which will feature regular commentary from named contributors across the data centre industry.

The new series is designed to provide a spotlight to select voices to share perspectives on the issues shaping the sector, from resilience and energy regulation to skills and emerging technologies.

Data Centre Review has always been a town hall – a place where diverse opinions are allowed to shine, and that will continue. However, unlike one-off guest comment pieces, On the Record is structured as a recurring series, with contributors publishing on Data Centre Review each and every month. That gives our readers a consistent set of industry viewpoints to follow over time.

What to expect from On the Record

Each On the Record column will offer a direct, accountable viewpoint from a recognised organisation or specialist contributor. Topics will span the challenges and opportunities facing data centres today, including:

  • Design, build and operations best practice
  • Emerging trends and technology impacts
  • Energy, sustainability and regulation
  • Infrastructure and resilience
  • Skills, talent and leadership

We’re launching the series with two initial contributors: 

On the Record with the Data Centre Alliance – This column will bring an industry-wide perspective on standards, priorities and the big conversations influencing the sector.

On the Record with Critical Careers – This column will focus on careers and representation in the industry, with an emphasis on women entering data centres and the barriers that still exist

The first On The Record with the Data Centre Alliance is now live, exploring the topic of water scarcity and whether the UK’s data centre industry can do more when it comes to reducing its water usage. You can read that here. 

Additional contributors are expected to be added over time, expanding the range of organisations and topics represented within the series. 

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DCR Predicts – UK data centres are booming – but is the power running out?

A panel of experts explore why grid capacity, connection queues, and rising AI power density are starting to dictate what can be built in 2026 – and where.

The UK’s data centre boom is accelerating, fuelled by the AI gold rush. Hyperscalers are expanding campuses and investment continues to flow, but the practical limits of growth are becoming harder to ignore.

Data centres already account for around 2.5% of the UK’s electricity consumption, and with AI workloads accelerating, that could rise sharply. Power availability, grid connection delays, planning constraints and sustainability pressures are no longer background considerations. As 2026 approaches, they are actively shaping what can be built, where, and how.

Power limits are no longer theoretical

For years, efficiency improvements helped offset rising demand, but that buffer is tiring quickly as AI is pushing power density beyond what many facilities were designed to support.

Skip Levens, Quantum’s Product Leader and AI Strategist, the LTO Program, sees a clear roadblock ahead. “In 2026, AI and HPC data centre buildouts will hit a non-negotiable limit: they cannot get more power into their data centres. Build-outs and expansions are on hold and power-hungry GPU-dense servers are forcing organisations to make hard choices.”

He suggests that modern tape libraries could be the solution to two pressing problems, “First by returning as much as 75% of power to the power budget to ’spend’ on GPUs and servers, while also keeping massive data sets nearby on highly efficient and reliable tape technology.”

Whether or not operators adopt that specific approach, the wider point holds. Growth is no longer just about adding capacity – it’s about how power is allocated and conserved within fixed limits.

Sustainability under pressure

Sustainability remains a defining theme for the sector, but the pace of AI-driven expansion is testing how deeply those commitments are embedded.

Terry Storrar, Managing Director at Leaseweb UK, describes the balancing act many operators are facing, “Sustainability is still the number one topic in the data centre industry. This has to work for the planet, but also from an economic perspective.

“We can’t keep running huge workloads and adding these to the grid,” he warns, “it’s simply not sustainable for the long term. So, there is huge investment into how we make technology do more for less. In the data centre industry, this translates into achieving significant power efficiencies.”

Mark Skelton, Chief Technology Officer at Node4, agrees, warning, “Data centres already consume around 2% of national power, while unchecked growth could push that to 10-15%, at a time when the grid is already strained and struggling to keep pace with soaring demand. In some areas, new developments are being delayed simply because the grid cannot deliver the required capacity quickly enough.”

To put this into perspective, Google’s new Essex facility alone is estimated to emit the same amount of carbon as 500 short-haul flights every year.

Grid delays, planning and skills gaps

There’s also a broader question of how well prepared the UK actually is for such a rapid scale-up in data centre infrastructure,

“Currently, the rush to build is overshadowing the need for a comprehensive approach that considers how facilities draw power and utilise water, as well as how their waste heat could be repurposed for nearby housing or industry,” Node4’s Skelton continues. “The technology to do this already exists, but adoption remains limited because there is little incentive or regulation to encourage it.”

In the UK, high-capacity grid connections can take over a year to secure, while planning delays and local opposition add further friction. Another roadblock is that “communities will increasingly challenge data centre expansion over water and energy use,” warns Curt Geeting, Acoustic Imaging Product Manager at Fluke. This is “pushing operators toward self-contained microgrids, hydrogen fuel cells, and other alternative power sources. Meanwhile, a growing shortage of skilled technicians and electricians will become a defining constraint.”

Geeting believes automation and I will be key to tackling some of these infrastructure roadblocks. “The data centre test and measurement market will enter 2026 on the brink of a major transformation driven by speed, density, and intelligence. Multi-fibre connectivity will expand rapidly to meet the bandwidth demands of AI-driven workloads, edge computing, and cloud-scale growth.

“Very small form factor connectors, multi-core fibre, and even air-core fibre technologies will begin reshaping how data moves through high-density environments – enabling faster transmission with lower latency. At the same time, automation and AI will take centre stage in testing and diagnostics, as intelligent tools and software platforms automate calibration tracking, compliance verification, and predictive maintenance across vast, complex facilities.”

Edge, sovereignty and a rethink of scale

Data centres remain the backbone of the digital economy, underpinning everything from cloud services to AI and edge computing. With the rapid rise in AI, there are concerns that the UK will struggle to keep pace.

“The AWS outage reminded everyone how risky it is to depend too heavily on centralised cloud infrastructure,” urges Bruce Kornfeld, Chief Product Officer at StorMagic. “When a single technical issue can disrupt entire operations at a massive scale, CIOs are realising that stability requires balance.

“In 2026, more organisations will move toward proven on-premises hyperconverged infrastructure for mission-critical applications at the edge. This approach integrates cloud connectivity to simplify operations, strengthen uptime and deliver consistent performance across all environments. AI will continue to accelerate this shift.”

“The year ahead will favour a shift toward simplicity, uptime and management,” he adds. “The organisations that succeed will be those that figure out how to avoid downtime with simple and reliable on-prem infrastructure to run local applications. These winners understand that chasing scale for its own sake does nothing but put them in a vulnerable position.” This redistribution may ease pressure on hyperscale campuses.

Looking to 2026

Looking ahead to 2026, the pressures facing UK data centres are unlikely to ease. Power constraints, grid delays and sustainability expectations are becoming long-term issues, not just temporary obstacles. While technologies like quantum computing may eventually reshape infrastructure design, they won’t resolve the immediate challenges operators face today. The UK still has an opportunity to lead in AI and digital infrastructure, but only if growth is planned with constraint in mind. Without clearer coordination, incentives and accountability, the rush to build risks locking inefficiencies into the system for years to come. 

This article is part of our DCR Predicts 2026 series. Check back every day this week for a new prediction, as we count down the final days of January.

DCR Predicts 2026
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Multi-million-pound data centre electrical infrastructure upgrade completed at Heathrow Corporate Park, London

Managed IT service provider Redcentric has completed a multi-million-pound electrical infrastructure upgrade as part of a wider data centre refurbishment project at its facility located at Heathrow Corporate Park in London. 

The project, which included a UPS replacement, was part-funded through the Industrial Energy Transformation Fund (IETF), now closed for applications, which supports the deployment of technologies that enable businesses with high energy use to transition to a low-carbon future.

As part of Redcentric’s high-profile project, leading UPS manufacturer CENTIEL has delivered equipment to protect an existing 7 megawatts of critical load through its multi-award-winning, highly efficient, true modular uninterruptible power supply (UPS), StratusPowerTM. The deployment of this modular UPS technology enables Redcentric to scale to 10.5 megawatts without the need for any further infrastructure change.

The facility, which is popular with FTSE 100 companies, is now seeing UPS efficiency improvements from below 90% to above 97% since the upgrade. This represents the potential to reduce more than 8,000 tonnes of CO₂ emissions over the next 15 years, supporting ESG compliance for both Redcentric and its household-name clients.

Paul Hone, Data Centre Facilities Director, Redcentric, confirmed, “Our London West colocation data centre is a strategically located facility that offers cost-effective ISO-certified racks, cages, private suites, and complete data halls, as well as significant on-site office space. The data centre is powered by 100% renewable energy, sourced solely from solar, wind and hydro.

“In 2023, we embarked on the start of a full upgrade across the facility, which included the electrical infrastructure and live replacement of legacy UPS before they reached end of life. This part of the project has now been completed with zero downtime or disruption. At Redcentric, we pride ourselves on the high level of uptime across all of our data centres. The continuous reinvestment into new equipment to gain efficiencies now means we can continue to offer our valued clients a 100% uptime guarantee at our London West facility.

“In addition, for 2026, we are also planning a further deployment of 12 megawatts of power protection from two refurbished data halls being configured to support AI workloads of the future.”

Aaron Oddy, Sales Manager, Centiel, added, “A critical component of the project was the strategic removal of 22 megawatts of inefficient, legacy UPS systems. By replacing outdated technology with the latest innovation, we have dramatically improved efficiency, delivering immediate and substantial cost savings.

“StratusPower offers an exceptional 97.6% efficiency, dramatically increasing power utilisation and reducing the data centre’s overall carbon footprint – a key driver for Redcentric.

“The legacy equipment was replaced by Centiel’s StratusPower UPS system, featuring 14 x 500 kW modular UPS systems. This delivered a significant reduction in physical size, while delivering greater resilience, as a direct result of StratusPower’s award-winning, unique architecture.

“StratusPower provides an unprecedented level of resilience and availability, guaranteeing near-zero system downtime, ensuring the data centre can offer its clients the highest standard of power protection. Standardising with this design across the site enables UPS modules to be seamlessly redeployed between systems, ensuring maximum asset utilisation and operational agility.”

Durata, a leader in modular data centre solutions and critical power infrastructure, completed the installation to the highest standards.

Hone continued, “Environmental considerations were a key driver for us. StratusPower is a truly modular solution, ensuring efficient running and maintenance of systems. Reducing the requirement for major midlife service component replacements further adds to its green credentials.

“With no commissioning issues, zero reliability challenges or problems with the product, we are already talking to the Centiel team about how they can potentially support us with power protection at our other sites.”

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