By Positive Phil
Everyone is talking about artificial intelligence right now.
AI tools.
AI companies.
AI investments.
But very few people are talking about the thing that actually makes all of it possible.
Electricity.
And a lot of it.
Most people experience the digital world through their phones and laptops. It feels almost invisible. You ask a question, upload a file, run an AI model, stream a movie, or process a financial transaction, and everything happens instantly.
But behind that seamless experience is a massive physical system.
Gigantic buildings filled with servers.
Miles of electrical infrastructure.
Industrial-scale cooling systems.
High-voltage transmission lines delivering enormous amounts of power.
The digital economy might feel virtual, but its backbone is very real.
The Infrastructure Most People Never See
Large-scale computing facilities are some of the most energy-intensive operations in the modern economy.
Rows and rows of machines run continuously, processing data, solving calculations, training artificial intelligence models, and securing digital networks.
These facilities operate around the clock.
24 hours a day.
7 days a week.
365 days a year.
And they consume an extraordinary amount of electricity.
In some cases, a single large computing campus can require as much power as a small city.
That’s the scale we’re talking about.
The AI Explosion Is Changing Everything
Artificial intelligence is dramatically increasing the need for computing power.
Training advanced AI models requires enormous clusters of specialized processors. Running those models in real time requires even more infrastructure.
Which means something important is happening right now.
Demand for large-scale computing facilities is rising fast.
And wherever computing demand grows, energy demand follows.
This is where the energy world and the technology world start to collide.
Energy Is the Foundation of the Digital World
From where I sit, working in the energy infrastructure space, this shift is incredibly interesting.
Because at the end of the day, every digital system depends on one thing.
Reliable electricity.
Without power, there is no AI.
No cloud computing.
No digital economy.
The more the world digitizes, the more important energy infrastructure becomes.
That includes:
• generation
• transmission
• substations
• grid capacity
• and large-scale power solutions near industrial loads
This is the part of the story that rarely gets attention in technology headlines.
But it’s the foundation underneath everything.
A New Industrial Era
When you step back, what’s happening right now looks a lot like the early days of past industrial revolutions.
In the early 1900s, factories transformed manufacturing.
In the late 20th century, the internet transformed communication and information.
Today, artificial intelligence and high-performance computing are creating an entirely new layer of industrial activity.
Except this time, the factories are digital.
Massive computing facilities.
Data centers.
High-performance infrastructure.
And every one of them runs on electricity.
The Intersection of Energy and Technology
What makes this moment fascinating is how closely energy and computing are becoming linked.
Technology companies need power.
Energy developers need to understand where demand is heading.
Utilities and infrastructure planners need to prepare for massive new electrical loads.
Entire regions are now competing to attract large-scale computing infrastructure because of the economic activity it brings.
This is where land, infrastructure planning, and reliable power become critical.
The companies and developers who understand how to build and support this infrastructure will play an important role in the next phase of the digital economy.
Why I Find This So Interesting
I’ve spent a lot of time around energy infrastructure and large industrial power users.
And what’s happening right now with computing demand is unlike anything we’ve seen before.
The scale is growing.
The speed is increasing.
And the importance of reliable power is becoming more obvious every day.
The digital world may look intangible on the surface, but underneath it is an enormous physical system that requires careful planning, investment, and energy.
That’s the part of the story I find fascinating.
The Real Engine Behind the Digital Economy
As artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and digital platforms continue to grow, one thing will remain constant.
They all depend on power.
Electricity is the quiet engine behind the digital economy.
And the next generation of infrastructure will be built around delivering it where the world needs it most.
More to come as I continue exploring the intersection of energy, technology, and the systems powering the modern world.
— Positive Phil
















