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Big Tech's $3 Trillion Struggle to Secure Enough Electricity

Big Tech's $3 Trillion Struggle to Secure Enough Electricity.

Por Redacción Sinergia Empresarial · 05 de julio de 2026 · 2 min
Big Tech's $3 Trillion Struggle to Secure Enough Electricity

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For most of modern history, oil was the world's most valuable resource.

It powered industrial growth, decided wars, reshaped geopolitics, and created the largest corporations in history.

The companies that learned to collect, process, and monetize information - Apple, Google, Amazon, Microsoft - became the most valuable enterprises the world had ever seen.

What makes Bitzero's power infrastructure uniquely positioned?

Data has become abundant, and the world's most powerful companies are now racing to secure one thing, and one thing only: electricity.

In the AI age, the true bottleneck is no longer information or algorithms; it is access to reliable, scalable power.

And that's great news for companies like Bitzero ( NASDAQ: AIBZ ), that are sitting on cost effective, abundant, sustainable electricity that's available right now.

Well, utilities are currently quoting two- to four-year wait times just to complete feasibility studies.

And that is before even considering the permissions required.

Google was so desperate to secure its own power source that it set aside $1 billion to build a data center in Indiana.

But then the company had to reverse course for fear the local planning commission would veto the project.

Meanwhile, according to Goldman Sachs research , global data center power demand could rise by 165% by the end of the decade compared to 2023 levels.

That means the only place to find the power critical to the AI boom is data centers that have already secured long-term power projects, or better yet, have their own infrastructure.

This is where Bitzero comes in, having already established itself in regions where power is abundant, underutilized, and structurally advantaged.

It has power in hydro-rich Norway, nuclear-backed Finland, and grid-secured rural North Dakota. Combined, that is more than a gigawatt of potential clean power capacity tied directly to its own infrastructure.

That power is not theoretical. Most of it is already permitted, connected, or under construction.

And crucially, it is power that does not depend on short-term market pricing or fragile utility negotiations.