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Amazon Signs 15-Year Offshore Wind Deal with RWE in Germany as Energy Demand Rises

Amazon has signed a new long-term clean energy purchase agreement with RWE, one of Europe’s largest renewable energy developers. The deal is a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) for 110 megawatts (MW) of power. This electricity comes from RWE’s Nordseecluster B offshore wind project in the German North Sea.

RWE and Amazon stated that the contracted power would produce enough clean electricity for over 139,000 German households every year.

For Amazon, the deal supports its climate commitment to reach net-zero carbon across its operations by 2040 under The Climate Pledge. For RWE, the contract helps finance a large new offshore wind build-out and adds a stable, long-term buyer for the project’s output.

Rocco Bräuniger, Amazon Country Manager for Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, stated:

“Germany is transitioning toward a modern, carbon-free energy system, and this agreement with RWE helps advance that vision. As Amazon works toward net-zero carbon by 2040, we continue enabling projects that strengthen Germany’s renewable energy capacity for generations to come.”

Nordseecluster: A Two-Phase Offshore Wind Giant in the North Sea

Nordseecluster is a major offshore wind development that RWE is building in two phases. The project sits in the German North Sea. Nordseecluster B is the phase tied to Amazon’s new 110 MW contract.

RWE Nordseecluster
Source: RWE website

According to reporting based on company details, Nordseecluster A has a total capacity of 660 MW and is currently under construction. It is scheduled to begin operations in early 2027. Nordseecluster B adds another 900 MW and is expected to begin commercial operation in 2029.

  • RWE said Nordseecluster is a joint project between RWE (51%) and Norges Bank Investment Management (49%).

The Amazon deal is a corporate PPA. That means the tech giant agrees to buy a defined amount of clean electricity tied to a specific project over a long period. These long-term contracts often help developers secure financing because they reduce revenue uncertainty. RWE’s press statement also framed PPAs as important tools for accelerating decarbonization while supporting supply security.

Ulf Kerstin, CCO at RWE Supply & Trading, noted:

“Power Purchase Agreements like this one with Amazon are crucial for accelerating Germany’s decarbonisation while strengthening long-term security of supply. By enabling large-scale offshore projects such as Nordseecluster, we can bring more reliable, carbon-free electricity onto the grid and support a resilient energy system.”

The image below shows RWE’s offshore wind portfolio in the German territory.

RWE offshore wind portfolio Germany
Source: RWE website

Rising Power Demand Meets Long-Term Clean Energy

Amazon’s electricity needs are rising, especially from logistics and fast-growing data infrastructure. Data centers also require reliable electricity 24 hours a day. That creates demand for large amounts of power, and it increases pressure to source cleaner electricity.

Amazon has made carbon-free energy a key part of its climate strategy. The company’s sustainability site states it plans to use more carbon-free energy. This is part of its goal to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2040.

The company has also expanded its renewable energy procurement rapidly. In its 2024 Amazon Sustainability Report, Amazon said that as of January 2025, it had invested in 621 renewable energy projects globally. It said 124 of those projects were added in 2024. Together, these projects represent 34 gigawatts (GW) of carbon-free energy capacity.

Amazon Renewable Energy Portfolio 2024
Amazon Renewable Energy Portfolio 2024

Amazon reported that for the second year in a row, it matched 100% of the electricity used in its global operations with renewable energy. This was highlighted in its 2024 report and summaries. This does not mean every Amazon site runs on renewables every hour.

The company usually buys enough renewable energy to cover its yearly electricity use. This is done through PPAs and certificates, which vary by region and structure.

In Germany, Amazon has built a growing clean energy portfolio. RWE and Amazon said the Nordseecluster agreement is the tech company’s fourth large-scale offshore wind PPA in Germany.

Amazon also has six on-site solar projects in the country. Together, Amazon’s 10 renewable projects in Germany total more than 790 MW of capacity. When fully operational, they should generate enough renewable electricity to power over 1,000,000 German homes each year.

That “homes powered” figure is an equivalency used to help readers understand scale. It does not mean Amazon supplies those homes directly. It means the wind and solar output from these projects is similar to what many households would use.

Amazon’s Net Zero Goals: Powering Growth While Cutting Carbon

Amazon has pledged to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2040. This goal is part of The Climate Pledge, which it helped create in 2019 with Global Optimism. The goal is ten years ahead of the Paris Agreement’s target. More than 500 companies have now signed the pledge.

In its 2024 Sustainability Report, Amazon announced it matched 100% of the electricity used in its global operations with renewable energy. This is the second year in a row it achieved this goal, hitting the target five years early. 

Amazon’s total carbon emissions increased from about 64.4 million tonnes of CO₂e in 2023 to around 68.3 million tonnes of CO₂e in 2024. This rise is partly due to business growth and the expansion of data centers. However, the company reduced its carbon intensity (emissions per dollar of sales), showing improved efficiency.

Amazon net zero 2040 journey
Source: Amazon report

The company is also moving to reduce emissions in other ways. It is growing its electric delivery fleet. It increased from around 19,000 to over 31,000 electric vans in 2024. The goal is to reach at least 100,000 electric delivery vehicles by 2030.

Amazon also works to cut packaging waste, improve energy efficiency, and support suppliers in reducing their emissions. These efforts connect to Amazon’s rising energy demands. This is particularly true as it expands its data centers and logistics sites.

By scaling renewable energy, electrifying transportation, and improving energy efficiency, Amazon aims to balance growth with long-term climate progress.

Corporate PPAs Power the Next Wave of Offshore Wind

Germany continues to expand offshore wind because it can produce large volumes of electricity near major demand centers. Offshore wind also tends to generate more consistently than onshore wind, although it still varies with weather and season.

Germany offshore wind capacity additions 2034

Corporate PPAs have become an important part of this market. They add demand from buyers beyond utilities and heavy industry. They also help fund projects by guaranteeing long-term revenue streams.

The Amazon–RWE deal also connects to a broader partnership between the two companies. The agreement builds on a Strategic Framework Agreement signed in June 2025. RWE backs Amazon’s goal for carbon-free energy. In return, Amazon helps RWE with digital changes using cloud services, AI, and data analytics from Amazon Web Services (AWS).

This pairing is becoming more common in the clean energy market. Utilities need digital tools to manage grids with higher shares of wind and solar. Tech firms need reliable clean energy for data infrastructure and long-term contracts can serve both sides.

What’s Next? Delivery Timelines, Grids, and the Next Energy Mix

The 110 MW deal adds another major offshore wind purchase to Amazon’s Germany portfolio. It also shows that long-term corporate PPAs remain important for financing offshore wind.

Several practical issues will shape the outcome. Nordseecluster B is due to start operating in 2029, but delays could shift when Amazon receives power. Grid integration is another challenge. Offshore wind output varies, and matching electricity use hour by hour is harder as data center demand grows.

Amazon’s broader energy strategy also matters. By January 2025, it had 621 clean energy projects and 34 GW of carbon-free capacity worldwide. The company is expanding beyond wind and solar, including nuclear investments, to support round-the-clock power needs.

Overall, the Amazon–RWE deal signals continued demand for long-term clean electricity as offshore wind expands in Germany’s North Sea and beyond.

The post Amazon Signs 15-Year Offshore Wind Deal with RWE in Germany as Energy Demand Rises appeared first on Carbon Credits.

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LEGO Expands Carbon Removal Portfolio with $2.8M Investment for Net-Zero Goals

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LEGO Expands Carbon Removal Portfolio with $2.8M Investment for Net-Zero Goals

The LEGO Group announced a new investment of DKK 18 million, or about $2.8 million, into carbon dioxide removal (CDR) projects. This funding adds to an earlier DKK 19 million, or about $2.6 million, commitment made in February 2025. These two amounts are separate. They support different groups of projects under LEGO’s expanding carbon removal portfolio.

LEGO has now invested about DKK 54 million, or $8–8.5 million, in carbon removal initiatives across eight projects. The company says these investments help it reach its goal of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

The toymaker emphasizes that it prioritizes cutting emissions within its own operations and supply chain first. It views carbon removal as a complementary tool for emissions that are difficult to eliminate.

Annette Stube, Chief Sustainability Officer at the LEGO Group, said:

“This purchase highlights our commitment to testing a broad range of credible pathways for nature and tech-based carbon removal. As the programme expands, it is helping to strengthen our understanding of different approaches and inform future decision-making on how carbon removal may complement our wider climate goals. While reducing emissions in our own operations remains our priority, this programme allows us to work with expert partners and contribute to solutions that may help scale effective climate action over time.”

Climate Experts Driving LEGO’s Carbon Removal

LEGO works with two specialist partners: Climate Impact Partners and ClimeFi.

Climate Impact Partners helps design and deliver nature-based carbon removal projects. ClimeFi focuses on engineered and technology-based removal solutions. These partnerships allow LEGO to support a mix of short-term and long-term carbon storage pathways.

The 2025 investment supports four projects, including biochar, enhanced rock weathering, and reforestation. The 2026 investment supports four additional projects. Together, they form a diversified carbon removal portfolio.

Nature-Based Carbon Removal: Forest Restoration in Mexico

One of the four new projects funded by the 2026 investment is a big reforestation effort in Quintana Roo State, Mexico. This project:

  • Restores more than 14,000 hectares of degraded tropical forests.
  • Includes native tree planting, species recovery, fire prevention, and community forest management.
  • Allocates over 20% of the budget to local job creation and income generation.
  • Bringing biodiversity benefits and supporting ecosystems for native wildlife.

This initiative is delivered through Climate Impact Partners in collaboration with Canopia Carbon. It adds to LEGO’s earlier help for reforestation in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley (USA). These forest projects remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as trees grow and store it in biomass and soil.

Nature-based removal projects often provide co-benefits. These include biodiversity protection, watershed improvements, and community income. However, they can face risks such as fire or land-use change. Long-term monitoring and strong governance are, therefore, critical.

Lego carbon removal projects
Source: LEGO

Engineered Carbon Removal Technologies: From Biomass to Marine CDR

The other three 2026 projects involve emerging CDR technologies managed by ClimeFi:

  • Biomass Geological Storage: Uses slurry injection to store carbon-rich organic waste deep underground.
  • Mineralization: Transforms CO₂ into manufactured limestone using reactive waste materials that can serve as building inputs.
  • Marine Carbon Dioxide Removal: Enhances wastewater alkalinity to remove CO₂ and store it durably in ocean water.

LEGO invests in various pathways to gain hands-on experience with new solutions. These approaches have different durability profiles. This means they store CO₂ for different lengths of time and may also scale in various ways.

Engineered carbon removal often offers higher durability than many nature-based solutions. In some cases, storage can last hundreds to thousands of years. However, these technologies are still developing and can be expensive in the early stages.

LEGO chooses to try various pathways to understand costs, scalability, durability, and verification standards in the carbon removal market. It also aligns with its net-zero goals.

Net-Zero in Motion: LEGO’s Dual Approach to Emissions

The LEGO Group has committed to a net-zero greenhouse gas emissions target by 2050. This target covers its full value chain, including Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions. LEGO’s near-term targets are validated by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi).

The toymaker has committed to reducing absolute Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions by 37% by 2032 from a 2019 baseline. It also aims to reduce absolute Scope 3 emissions by 37% within the same timeframe. These targets align with limiting global warming to 1.5°C.

LEGO ghg emissions target
Source: LEGO

LEGO’s FY2024 Sustainability Statement says the company’s greenhouse gas emissions were around 1.7 million tonnes of CO₂ equivalent (tCO₂e).

While the statement does not yet include a full breakdown of emissions for that year, the most recent publicly disclosed data (for 2023) show that LEGO’s total emissions were about 1.82 million tCO₂ equivalent. In that year:

  • Scope 1 (direct emissions) were approximately 23,403 tCO₂e.
  • Scope 2 (purchased energy) was very low — effectively 1 tCO₂e when using market‑based accounting due to renewable energy matching.
  • Scope 3 (value chain emissions) accounted for about 1.80 million tCO₂e, representing roughly 99 % of total emissions.

The dominance of Scope 3 is consistent with LEGO’s industry profile:

Most emissions arise from materials, manufacturing by suppliers, transport, and end‑of‑life impacts, rather than from the company’s own direct operations. Scope 1 and 2 emissions accounted for roughly 1% of total emissions.

LEGO says it uses 100% renewable electricity for its operations. This comes from on-site solar panels and renewable energy certificates. The company first matched 100% of its electricity use with renewable energy generation in 2017.

In 2024, LEGO also reported progress in sustainable materials purchasing, which indirectly contributes to reduced emissions. About 47 % of the materials purchased to make LEGO elements were certified via mass balance principles. This translates to an estimated average of 33 % renewable sources in raw materials.

Half of all purchased materials were produced with sustainable sources. The same goes for its packaging materials, where 93% were from paper.

LEGO sustainable packaging
Source: LEGO

LEGO recognises that carbon removal projects are not a substitute for reducing emissions. They see CDR as a helpful tool. It targets emissions that are tough to fully eliminate.

Investing in both nature-based and technology-based removals allows the company to:

  • Understand emerging solutions.
  • Gain practical insight into quality, cost, and permanence.
  • Build relationships with expert partners.
  • Support broader climate goals beyond its own footprint.

LEGO’s climate disclosures stress that the company prioritizes operational cuts first. The company engages suppliers. It uses low-carbon materials and boosts energy efficiency. It also expands renewable energy in its value chain.

The company uses its CDR portfolio to guide future decisions, which helps scale effective climate action while focusing on reducing emissions. Their main goal is to achieve net zero by 2050.

Carbon Removal in Corporate Net-Zero Strategies

Carbon dioxide removal is becoming more important in corporate climate strategies. McKinsey & Company says that by mid-century, the world may need billions of tons of carbon removal each year to reach net-zero.

McKinsey estimates that the CDR market could grow to between $40 billion and $80 billion per year by 2030. By 2050, the market could reach $300 billion to $1.2 trillion annually if scaled to climate targets.

CDR credit demand annually 2030 McKinsey
Source: McKinsey & Company

Many climate models show that even aggressive emission cuts may leave 10% to 20% of emissions hard to eliminate. Carbon removal can help address these residual emissions.

Corporate demand plays a key role in building supply. Early buyers send price and volume signals that support project financing. Frontier and other groups have promised to spend hundreds of millions on future carbon removal credits. Members include major technology and consulting firms such as Google, McKinsey, and H&M Group.

Despite growth, current global carbon removal capacity remains far below what climate science suggests is needed. High-quality projects require strong measurement, reporting, and verification systems. Standards continue to evolve across voluntary carbon marke.

Learning and Leading: LEGO’s Early-Mover Advantage in CDR

LEGO’s total DKK 54 million commitment represents a learning strategy as much as a climate contribution. The company gains experience in evaluating project quality, permanence, and social impact. It also builds relationships in a fast-developing sector.

The company’s approach reflects a broader shift among multinational firms. Many now test different removal methods while continuing to reduce direct emissions. This dual strategy helps companies prepare for future regulatory frameworks and stakeholder expectations.

As the global carbon removal market expands, early investments like these help improve project standards, scale innovation, and attract more capital. The sector still faces cost and scalability challenges. But corporate participation provides one pathway to accelerate development.

LEGO’s CDR investments show a steady expansion of the company’s carbon removal portfolio. They also reveal how major consumer brands are integrating carbon removal into long-term climate strategies while continuing to prioritize emissions reduction.

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Copper Prices Surge Above $13,000: Best Copper Stocks to Watch in 2026

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Copper has re-entered the spotlight. Prices on the London Metal Exchange surged to a record $14,527.50 per metric ton on January 29 and continue to hover above $13,000. That rally did not happen by chance. Instead, it reflects a powerful mix of AI-driven demand, tight global supply, and rising geopolitical risk.

Today, copper sits at the center of the electrification and digital revolution. From AI data centers and electric vehicles to renewable power grids and defense systems, the red metal powers it all. As a result, investors, miners, and manufacturers are repositioning for what many now call a structural copper deficit.

LME copper prices
Source: LME

AI and Electrification Are Redefining Copper Demand

The global critical minerals market is entering a new phase. According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the sector could grow two to three times by 2040. That expansion may require between $500 billion and $600 billion in new capital investment.

Electric vehicles need roughly four times more copper than traditional combustion cars. Wind turbines and solar farms require vast cabling networks. Meanwhile, grid upgrades demand heavy copper wiring to handle rising electricity loads.

AI-powered hyperscale data centers consume enormous amounts of copper for power distribution, cooling systems, and grounding infrastructure. A single large AI facility can require up to 50,000 metric tons of copper. That is three to four times more than a conventional data center.

J.P. Morgan estimates that copper demand from data centers alone could reach around 475,000 metric tons in 2026. That represents an annual increase of about 110,000 tons.

  • S&P Global study projects that global copper demand will grow from 28 million metric tons a year in 2025 to 42 million metric tons by 2040 – an increase of 50% above current levels.

copper demand AI

Major tech players are already securing supply. In January, Amazon Web Services signed a two-year agreement with Rio Tinto to purchase domestically produced copper from an Arizona mine. The deal marked one of the first direct links between low-carbon copper and AI infrastructure development.

Deficit or Surplus? Analysts Clash Over Copper’s Outlook

While demand accelerates, supply struggles to keep pace. Analysts now describe copper’s imbalance as structural rather than cyclical. J.P. Morgan projects a refined copper shortfall of roughly 330,000 metric tons in 2026.

Meanwhile, the International Copper Study Group (ICSG) expects the market to shift to a 150,000-ton deficit after previously forecasting a surplus of 209,000 tons.

copper supply
Source: ICSG

Even Goldman Sachs recently called copper the commodity with the highest growth potential this year, labeling it a “core target of the AI and electrification supercycle.” It projected that the copper market would record a surplus of around 160,000 metric tons this year. As a result, supply and demand are moving closer to balance. Given this outlook, the bank does not expect the global copper market to slip into a sustained shortage anytime soon.

copper supply
Source: Goldman Sachs

Mining projects face permitting delays, rising capital costs, and operational disruptions. Ore grades are declining at several mature mines. Political tensions in key producing regions have also added uncertainty.

For example, Freeport-McMoRan continues working to restore full operations at its massive Grasberg complex. The company expects production to ramp up in the second quarter of 2026, with about 85% of operations restored by the second half of the year. However, full recovery across all mining zones may not happen until 2027.

Freeport’s new smelter also remains on standby after a previous fire, though management expects concentrate intake to resume later in 2026. These challenges illustrate a broader trend: supply is not flexible enough to respond quickly to demand shocks.

US Inventories Surge, But Global Tightness Persists

Interestingly, the United States experienced a sharp rise in refined copper imports during 2025.

As per the latest reports, after the White House postponed its decision on tariffs, the price gap between U.S. copper traded on the CME and copper traded on the LME quickly narrowed. As a result, the trading opportunity disappeared for a short time. However, copper imports into the U.S. soon picked up again.

In December alone, nearly 200,000 metric tons entered the U.S. market. According to the World Bureau of Metal Statistics (WBMS), total U.S. refined copper imports reached 1.4 million tons in 2025. That marked a year-on-year increase of 730,000 tons.

Similarly, according to Benchmark, earlier in 2025, the price gap between U.S. and global copper prices rose to nearly $3,000 per ton. That large difference pulled huge volumes of copper into the country.

It estimates that more than 730 kt of copper is effectively “trapped” in the U.S. This surge created a sizeable inventory build inside the country.

Copper outlook

Yet, global supply remains tight. Much of the imported metal reflects precautionary stockpiling and strategic positioning rather than structural oversupply. Outside North America, deficits still loom large.

Therefore, while U.S. warehouses appear full, the broader market remains stretched.

Best Copper Stocks to Watch as the Deficit Deepens

With prices elevated and deficits emerging, mining companies are scaling up investments. Selective producers with strong balance sheets and operations in stable jurisdictions may benefit most if copper prices reaccelerate. In this global outlook, Canadian and allied-country producers enjoy added appeal.

For instance:

Teck Resources

The miner reiterated 2026 production guidance of between 455,000 and 530,000 tonnes. The company continues ramping up the Quebrada Blanca Phase 2 project in Chile, with peak capital spending nearing $2 billion. A proposed merger with Anglo American could create one of the world’s top five copper producers.

Hudbay Minerals

It reported record revenue and EBITDA in 2025. The company doubled its quarterly dividend and increased 2026 capital spending to support both sustaining operations and growth initiatives, including the Copper World project in Arizona.

Lundin Mining

Similarly, Lundin Mining delivered record revenue of $4.1 billion in 2025. Copper production reached over 331,000 tonnes at competitive cash costs. The company expects output to remain stable in 2026, while continuing to advance development projects across its portfolio.

Developers also see opportunity. Capstone Copper projects 2026 production between 200,000 and 230,000 tonnes. It plans significant sustaining and exploration investments to strengthen long-term growth. In addition, North American manufacturers are expanding. Revere Copper Products secured a $207.5 million credit facility in January to fund capacity expansion tied to electrification and data center demand.

So it’s clearly the industry is preparing for sustained strength.

Can Prices Stay Above $13,000?

The key question now is sustainability. A Reuters poll of 31 analysts published January 29 placed the median 2026 copper price forecast at $11,975 per ton. That figure sits well below recent peaks, yet it represents the highest consensus forecast ever recorded.

In other words, even cautious analysts expect historically strong pricing.

In conclusion, copper’s surge above $14,000 per ton signals more than a short-term rally. It reflects a big structural change. AI data centers, electrification, and energy transition projects are rewriting demand projections. At the same time, supply growth struggles under operational, political, and financial constraints.

Although price volatility will likely persist, the broader setup remains supportive. Producers with low costs, strong balance sheets, and exposure to stable jurisdictions may offer strategic advantages in this new cycle.

In many ways, copper has become the backbone of the AI and clean energy economy. And if current trends continue, the red metal’s supercycle may only be getting started.

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Adani’s $100 Billion Renewable AI Power Play: Can India Lead the Data Center Revolution?

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India is stepping into the global AI race with bold ambition. The Adani Group has unveiled a massive USD 100 billion plan to build renewable-powered, AI-ready hyperscale data centers by 2035. The strategy goes beyond digital infrastructure. Instead, it combines clean energy, advanced computing, and sovereign control into one integrated national platform.

If delivered as planned, this initiative could reshape India’s role in the global AI economy.

A $250 Billion Renewable-Backed AI Ecosystem Taking Shape

First and foremost, the scale of investment stands out. Adani’s direct $100 billion commitment is expected to catalyze another $150 billion across server manufacturing, advanced electrical systems, sovereign cloud platforms, and related industries. As a result, India could see the creation of a $250 billion AI infrastructure ecosystem over the next decade.

Currently, India’s data center capacity stood at 1,263 MW last year. However, projections suggest this could exceed 4,500 MW by 2030, backed by up to $25 billion in investments. At present, nearly 80% of capacity is concentrated in three metro cities. Therefore, policymakers are now pushing for more balanced regional expansion.

india data center capacity
Data Source: Colliers

This broader vision aligns closely with AdaniConnex’s roadmap. The company plans to expand its existing 2 GW national footprint toward a 5 GW target. Consequently, India could emerge as one of the world’s largest integrated renewable-powered AI data center platforms.

Importantly, strategic partnerships are already in motion. The Group is working with Google to build a gigawatt-scale AI data center campus in Visakhapatnam. At the same time, it is collaborating with Microsoft on major campuses in Hyderabad and Pune.

In addition, discussions with Flipkart aim to develop a second AI-focused facility tailored for high-performance digital commerce and large-scale AI workloads. Together, these alliances strengthen India’s ambition to become a serious AI infrastructure hub.

Integrating Renewable Energy and Hyperscale Compute

Unlike traditional data center projects, this 5 GW rollout integrates renewable power generation, transmission networks, storage systems, and hyperscale AI computing within a single coordinated architecture. In other words, energy and compute capacity will expand together, not separately.

adani renewables
Source: Adani
  • This approach matters because AI workloads are becoming increasingly energy-intensive. Modern AI racks often draw 30 kW or more per unit.
  • Therefore, high-density compute clusters require advanced liquid cooling systems and efficient power designs to maintain uptime and reduce waste.

At the same time, data sovereignty remains a priority. Dedicated compute capacity will support Indian large language models and national data initiatives. As a result, sensitive data can remain within the country while still benefiting from global-scale infrastructure.

Reliable transmission networks and resilient grids will underpin the system. By aligning generation, storage, and processing, the platform aims to ensure stability even at hyperscale.

Leveraging India’s Renewable Advantage

AI growth is directly tied to energy access. Globally, the surge in AI adoption has triggered concerns about rising electricity demand and carbon emissions. According to the IEA, 83 percent of India’s power sector investment in 2024 went to clean energy.

Adani plans to anchor its AI expansion on renewable energy. A key pillar is the 30 GW Khavda renewable project in Gujarat, where more than 10 GW is already operational. Moreover, the Group has pledged another $55 billion to expand its renewable portfolio, including one of the world’s largest battery energy storage systems.

india renewable

Battery storage will help manage peak loads and smooth intermittent renewable supply. Consequently, hyperscale AI campuses can operate reliably without heavy reliance on fossil fuels.

In addition, cable landing stations at Adani-operated ports will enhance global connectivity. These links will support low-latency data flows between India and major regions across the Americas, Europe, Africa, and Asia. Thus, India’s AI infrastructure will remain globally integrated while being powered by domestic renewable energy.

Building Domestic Supply Chains and Digital Sovereignty

Another critical element of the strategy focuses on reducing supply-chain risks. Global disruptions have exposed vulnerabilities in sourcing transformers, power electronics, and grid systems. Therefore, Adani plans to co-invest in domestic manufacturing partnerships to produce high-capacity transformers, advanced power electronics, inverters, and industrial thermal management solutions within India.

This step not only lowers external dependence but also strengthens India’s industrial base. Over time, the country could evolve from being a data hub into a producer and exporter of next-generation AI infrastructure.

Furthermore, the Group intends to integrate agentic AI across its logistics, ports, and industrial corridors. By doing so, it connects digital intelligence with physical infrastructure. This alignment supports national infrastructure programs while modernizing heavy industries through secure automation.

Expanding Access to High-Performance Compute

Beyond infrastructure scale, accessibility is equally important. India’s AI startups and research institutions often face compute shortages. Therefore, Adani plans to reserve a portion of GPU capacity for domestic innovators.

This move could significantly reduce entry barriers for startups and deep-tech entrepreneurs. As a result, innovation may accelerate across sectors such as healthcare, logistics, climate modeling, and advanced manufacturing.

The strategy also aligns with India’s five-layer AI framework—applications, models, chips, energy, and data centers. By participating across these layers, the Group strengthens the entire AI stack.

In parallel, partnerships with academic institutions will establish AI infrastructure engineering programs and applied research labs. A national fellowship initiative will further address the country’s growing AI skills gap.

India’s AI Data Center Market Gains Massive Momentum

Meanwhile, market fundamentals remain strong. According to Mordor Intelligence, India’s AI-optimized data center market is valued at $1.19 billion in 2025 and could reach $3.10 billion by 2030, growing at over 21% annually.

india data center AI
Source: Modor Intelligence

Several factors are driving this acceleration. Data localization requirements are tightening. Enterprises increasingly treat sovereign data processing as a strategic necessity rather than a cost burden. Moreover, energy-efficient AI hardware and hyperscale cloud expansions are fueling capital expenditure.

The Mumbai–Bangalore corridor has emerged as a key AI backbone due to its fiber density, cloud presence, and renewable energy agreements. Major hyperscalers have expanded aggressively, creating spillover demand for colocation providers and secondary cities.

Taken together, Adani’s $100 billion renewable-powered AI platform represents one of the most ambitious integrated energy-and-compute commitments ever announced at a national scale.

Importantly, this is about aligning renewable energy, grid resilience, hyperscale compute, domestic manufacturing, and digital sovereignty into a single long-term strategy. It would reduce India’s compute scarcity, accelerate clean energy deployment, and secure a leadership role in the global Intelligence Revolution.

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