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Pennsylvania Data Center Intel
Latest data center news, projects, power and policy across Pennsylvania — updated daily.
Recent Pennsylvania data center news
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Building for an Accelerated Future: AI, Infrastructure and Governance
Vivek Mohindra (Dell Technologies) delivered keynotes at the State of AI in Austin and the US-India Chamber of Commerce AI Impact Summit 2026.
- Main announcement/action: Vivek Mohindra recommended organizations scale AI with secure, flexible infrastructure, strong governance and mission-aligned use cases, urging governments and enterprises to design for scale from the start and adopt Zero Trust, model monitoring, and governed data pipelines; he cited that data centers are scaling toward gigawatt levels and urged focus on two or three mission-aligned use cases.
- Background and details: He referenced economic estimates that AI could add up to $15 trillion to global GDP by the end of the decade and that generative AI could add $2.6–$4.4 trillion annually (McKinsey); he described Dell’s approach (Dell AI Factory, services, and Zero Trust principles) and noted events were the State of AI in Austin and the US-India Chamber of Commerce AI Impact Summit 2026.
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Leading the Charge in AI Supercomputing, Innovation and Initiatives
Dell Technologies announced expanded partnerships, infrastructure projects, workforce commitments, and a major philanthropic investment by Michael and Susan Dell.
- Key announcement: Dell confirmed AI infrastructure partnerships and research projects (including powering the Massachusetts AI Hub and TACC’s new supercomputer Horizon), plus a $6.25 billion Invest America investment by Michael and Susan Dell and a company pledge to match a $1,000 Treasury seed deposit for each child of U.S.-based team members born between January 1, 2025 and December 31, 2028.
- Background and other details: Dell participated in the DOE Genesis Roundtable (Washington, D.C.) and partnered with the White House USTF to recruit 1,000 technologists for two-year federal agency terms; additional initiatives include the TCU AI Initiative (Dell AI Factory + NVIDIA), events at CES 2026 (Quantum AI, Circular Economy), the NGA Regional Economic Opportunity Summit in Austin, and product/education launches at Bett UK.
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Top 20 countries by the number of data centers in 2025
DevelopmentAid publishes an overview of the global data center market, trends, and investment forecasts.
- Main summary: The article provides a market overview noting the United States leads with 4,165 data centers (about 3,000 more being built/planned) and estimates the sector could reach US$22.7 billion by 2030 driven by generative AI, cloud services, 5G, and IoT. It cites major investment figures including Google >€5.5 billion (US$6.37 billion) in Germany and a €1 billion project involving Nvidia and Deutsche Telekom.
- Background & details: The piece aggregates third-party reports and data (Statista, Axios, McKinsey, JLL, Datum, Baxtel, Global Data Center Hub) and provides regional details: McKinsey’s US$6.7 trillion capex by 2030 (US$5.2 trillion for AI-optimized facilities, US$1.5 trillion for typical IT), Latin America growth from ~US$5bn (2023) to >US$10bn by 2029, and capacity/footprint statistics for countries and hyperscale operators. It is an informational market overview, not a primary announcement of a single new project with implementation timelines.
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Wider view of risk, resiliency needed to thrive in an era that promises uncertainty
Facilities Dive reports experts advising facilities managers to broaden disaster preparedness in 2026 to include non-weather risks such as energy insecurity, civil unrest, physical and cyber threats.
- Main guidance: Experts (Laurie Gilmer of Facility Engineering Associates; Paul Morgan of JLL) recommend expanding resiliency planning beyond natural disasters to cover energy/IT outages, civil unrest, workplace violence, theft (e.g., copper) and cyber/physical attacks; they emphasize assessing where mechanical/electrical equipment is sited, preparing backup power and enabling remote operations.
- Background & specifics:Sedgwick forecasts at least one major U.S. hurricane likely in 2026; California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection forecasts above-normal large fire potential; the EIA projects electricity consumption growth of 1% in 2026 and 3% in 2027 and reports retail electricity price at 13.63¢ per kWh at end-2025; experts note data center demand (including AI data centers) stressing grids (PJM) and growing interest in microgrids, solar + battery systems, VLAN isolation for BMS, smart cameras and advanced security measures.
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Understanding Bottlenecks for Efficiently Serving LLM Inference With KV Offloading
William Meng and co-authors (University of Pennsylvania; Intel) submitted an arXiv paper analysing KV cache offloading bottlenecks for long-context LLM inference.
- Main announcement: The paper derives \kappa_{\text{crit}}, the critical cached-to-prefill token ratio where execution becomes memory-bound, and reports that typical workloads exceed this threshold by orders of magnitude; it also presents empirical measurements showing 99% of latency spent on transfers and GPUs consuming only 28% of rated TDP, and proposes optimizations for hardware interconnects, model architectures, and scheduling algorithms.
- Background and details: Submitted to MLSys 2026 (arXiv:2601.19910, submitted 16 Dec 2025); full-text PDF, HTML, and TeX source are provided on arXiv, DOI via DataCite, and the paper is licensed under CC BY 4.0.
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Nuclear safety rules quietly rewritten to favor AI
The U.S. Department of Energy has quietly rewritten nuclear safety and security orders to accelerate deployment of small modular reactors (SMRs) tied to an DoE program aiming to launch three experimental commercial reactors by July 4.
- Main action:DoE quietly issued new orders (obtained by NPR) that significantly trim hundreds of pages of safety, security, groundwater protection, environmental protections, and waste-management requirements — e.g., a 500+-page security package reduced to a 23-page order and a 59-page waste manual condensed to 25 pages; the DoE program targets three experimental commercial reactors by July 4 and the effort is backed by “billions” in private, VC and public investments with tech backers Amazon, Google, Meta.
- Background/details: NPR obtained over a dozen of the new orders; specific rule changes include groundwater protections weakened (from “must”/“best available technology” to “consideration”), environmental protections relaxed (from requiring protection to “minimizing, if practical”), accident-investigation threshold raised (from exposures of 2x legal dose to 4x), and ALARA guidance removed; changes were justified by DoE as reducing “unnecessary regulations” to spur innovation.
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Comment on Where Ohio’s front-runners for governor stand on ag, energy and the environment by Yolanda Runte
Ohio Corn & Wheat and the Ohio Cattlemen’s Association endorsed Vivek Ramaswamy, while front-runners Vivek Ramaswamy, Amy Acton and Casey Putsch outlined positions on agriculture, energy and environment ahead of the May 5 primary.
- Endorsements & campaign commitments: Ohio Corn & Wheat (OCW) and Ohio Cattlemen’s Association endorsed Vivek Ramaswamy (OCW endorsement announced July/August 2025; OCA endorsement in November 2025). Candidates committed to continuing or building on H2Ohio, addressing water quality, supporting or rethinking biofuels, proposing energy cost reforms (PUCO oversight, consumer protections, PJM reform) and raising concerns about data centers and their grid/tax impacts.
- Background & concrete details:H2Ohio had 2.5 million acres enrolled and $270 million invested before the program was defunded by 40% in the 2025 biennial budget; the Republican primary is set for Tuesday, May 5, 2026. The article documents candidate positions on E15/biofuel policymaking (federal debate delayed until a February commission) and specific utility/transmission concerns tied to data centers.
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AI’s Power Crunch: Six Trends That Will Decide Who Wins the Next Decade
Shaun Walsh (CMO, Peak Nano) argues that the U.S. must massively expand generation, transmission, and grid components and treat power access as the binding constraint on national AI leadership.
- Main announcement/action:Shaun Walsh calls for a massive expansion of power plants, transmission lines, and advanced grid hardware to meet AI demand, and urges U.S. policy to prioritize modernization, secure supply chains, orchestrate demand (data centers as grid participants), and fast‑track permitting; he frames the 2026–2036 period as the critical decade for implementation.
- Background and detail: The commentary cites concrete trends and numbers: data centers currently consume 3–4% of U.S. electricity and are projected to reach 11–12% by 2030, component lead times (turbines, transformers, switchgear, capacitor film) are multi‑year, policy shifts (federal permitting reforms) are underway, and technologies named include nuclear, fusion, natural gas, solar, and batteries; Peak Nano and other firms are highlighted for domestic capacitor film solutions to relieve supply constraints.
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How Hyperscale AI Is Remaking the Power Grid
Industrial Info Resources (IIR) reported at PowerGen International that the US has approximately $2.4 trillion in AI data center development underway.
- Key announcement: IIR presented at PowerGen International (Jan. 20-22, 2026) that the US accounts for about $2.4 trillion in AI data center development and that global announced and ongoing data center investment ≈ $3.2 trillion; IIR also reported roughly 296 GW of cumulative planned capacity in the US with more than 70 projects ≥ 1 GW and projected US electricity demand rising from ~23 GW (2023) to ~42 GW (today) and on target to surpass 90 GW by 2030.
- Details and context: IIR outlined concentration by state (Texas ~$517 billion, Virginia ~$344 billion, Georgia ~$217 billion, Missouri ~$121 billion, Arizona ~$102 billion), noted month-over-month investment velocity (more than $100 billion announced per month over the past year; October 2025 > $350 billion), and described near-term procurement strategies including gas turbines (booked through end of decade), reciprocating engines, BESS, and partnerships on nuclear; timeline compression pressures require many projects to deliver generation and interconnection within 12–24 months.
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How Utilities Can Prepare for the AI-Driven Energy Surge
Andrew Bordine (Actalent) advises utilities to prepare for AI-driven electricity demand growth.
- Main announcement/action:Utilities should plan now for a rapid increase in load driven by AI data centers: the article cites an expected 25% increase by 2030 and more than 75% by 2050 (vs. 2023), notes that single hyperscale centers can exceed 100 MW, and calls for system overhauls (conductor upgrades, new transmission, substation work), near-term options like non-wire alternatives and restarting mothballed generation, and explicit project-scale planning.
- Background and details:Staffing shortfalls and lack of specialized engineers are highlighted, with a recommendation to hire external skilled workers; regulatory and permitting hurdles (right-of-way, restarting plants) are emphasized, and the article references concrete commercial activity: Talen Energy’s June deal with Amazon to supply 1,920 MW of carbon-free nuclear power through 2042, Talen’s 2.2 GW of nuclear capacity receiving the Section 45U tax credit, and the potential for additional small modular reactors to qualify for clean energy tax credits.