It's such a big number that it's hard to imagine. Worldwide, around $3tn (£2.2tn) will be spent on data centres that support AI between now and 2029.
That estimate comes from the investment bank Morgan Stanley, which adds that roughly half of that sum will go on construction costs, and half on the pricey hardware supporting the AI revolution.
To put that number into perspective, that's roughly what the entire French economy was worth in 2024.
In the UK alone, it's estimated that another 100 data centres will be built over the next few years to meet the demand for AI processing.
Some of those will be built for Microsoft which earlier this month announced $30bn (£22bn) investment in the UK's AI sector.
Just what is it about AI data centres that's different from the traditional building containing ranks of computer servers that keeps our personal photos, social media accounts and work applications humming away?
And are they worth this terrific spending spree?
Data centres have been growing in size for years. A new term, hyperscale, was coined by the tech industry to describe sites where the power requirement runs into tens of megawatts, before gigawatts, a thousand times bigger than megawatts, came on the scene.


