Southeast Asia Advances Nuclear Plans to Power Growing AI Data Centers
Southeast Asia aims to triple nuclear capacity by 2050 to secure energy for AI data centers that consume electricity equal to 100,000 households, the International Energy Agency says.
- Five Southeast Asian nations—Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, and the Philippines—are reviving nuclear energy programs to meet surging electricity demand from AI-focused data centers.
- Malaysia, aspiring to be Southeast Asia's AI computing hub, hosts over 500 operational data centers, with 300 under construction and 1,140 planned, according to think tank Ember.
- A standard AI data center consumes as much electricity as 100,000 households, the International Energy Agency reports, driving regional interest in nuclear as an alternative energy source.
- Indonesia aims to build two small modular reactors by 2034, while Vietnam is constructing two nuclear plants backed by Russian state corporation Rosatom.
- Nearly 40 nations, including the United States and China, have joined a global push to triple installed nuclear energy capacity by 2050, positioning Southeast Asia within a broader climate strategy.
30 Articles
30 Articles
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Southeast Asian countries give nuclear power plans for AI data centers a second look as Iran war disrupts energy supplies
Nuclear power is getting a second look in Southeast Asia as countries prepare to meet surging energy demand as they vie for artificial intelligence-focused data centers.
Southeast Asia revisits nuclear power plans for AI data centres
Bangkok: Nuclear power is getting a second look in Southeast Asia as countries prepare to meet surging energy demand as they vie for artificial intelligence-focused data centres. Several Southeast Asian nations are reviving mothballed nuclear plans and setting ambitious targets and nearly half of the region could, if they pursue those goals, have nuclear energy in the 2030s. Even countries without current plans have signaled their interest. Sout…
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