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Bain & Co: AI Infrastructure Faces $800bn Shortfall

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  • baoshi.raoB Offline
    baoshi.raoB Offline
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    Published Time: 2025-09-26T11:47:00Z

    Article

    Data & Analytics

    Bain & Co: AI Infrastructure Faces $800bn Shortfall

    By Georgia Collins

    September 26, 2025

    4 mins

    Share

    David Crawford, Chairman of Bain’s Global Technology Practice (Credit: Bain & Company)

    Bain & Company warns that global AI demand will outpace data center capacity by 2030 unless $2tn in annual revenue and $500bn in capital are secured.

    Company portals

    • Bain & Company, Inc.

    Tags

    AI, Compute, HPC, Investment, Strategy, Data Centres, Data Centers, Bain & Co

    Bain & Company’s latest Global Technology Report underscores the vast investments required to fulfill AI computing needs by the year 2030.

    The consultancy estimates a demand of $2tn in annual revenue to facilitate the expansion of worldwide data center capacity, projecting a required capacity of 200GW.

    Despite factoring in AI-driven savings, Bain identifies an $800bn shortfall.

    AI demand outpaces infrastructure growth

    David Crawford, Chairman of Bain’s Global Technology Practice, outlines the magnitude of this challenge.

    “If the current scaling laws hold, AI will increasingly strain supply chains globally,” he says.

    “By 2030, technology executives will be faced with the challenge of deploying about $500bn in capital expenditures and finding about $2tn in new revenue to profitably meet demand.

    “Meanwhile, because AI compute demand is outpacing semiconductor efficiency, the trends call for dramatic increases in power supply on grids that have not added capacity for decades.

    “Add the arms race dynamic between nations and leading providers and the potential for overbuild and underbuild has never been more challenging to navigate. Working through the potential for innovation, infrastructure, supply shortages and algorithmic gains is critical to navigate the next few years.”

    Bain’s report emphasizes that AI compute demand is outstripping Moore’s Law more than twofold.

    The USA is anticipated to represent half of the 200GW demand, putting pressure not only on financial resources but also on energy infrastructures.

    From experimentation to scaling

    Even though some enterprises are already benefiting from EBITDA improvements of 10–25% through AI implementations, most businesses are still in the experimentation phase.

    Bain indicates that forerunners are advancing into agentic AI, building platforms that enable autonomous workflows across multiple systems.

    These systems necessitate data centers designed for high virtualization, low-latency connections and seamless real-time data access.

    The consultancy outlines four maturity stages of agentic AI, ranging from single-task workflows to complex multi-agent constellations.

    The intermediary stages, where capital investment and innovation meet, will pose significant demands on data center infrastructure.

    The latest insights from Bain & Company’s sixth annual Global Technology Report (Credit: Bain & Company)

    SaaS and sovereign AI pressures

    The report further examines disruptions in the SaaS industry.

    AI could broaden markets available to SaaS companies, but it will necessitate strategic transformations in data ownership, monetization and integration. Data centers will be pivotal to enabling SaaS firms to integrate AI into workflows extensively.

    Anne Hoecker, Head of Bain’s Global Technology Practice, stresses the geopolitical pressures impacting digital infrastructure.

    “Sovereign AI capabilities are increasingly seen as a strategic advantage on par with economic and military strength,” she says. “While sovereign AI is a global priority, individual countries' goals vary. Therefore, for most countries, achieving full-stack independence is not feasible, at least not today. Considering these differences, global AI standards are unlikely to converge.

    “To succeed, multinational firms will need to localize not just compliance, but also their technology architecture. Businesses need to make decisions with optionality, moving boldly where confidence is high and prioritizing flexibility where uncertainty rules.”

    The fragmentation of semiconductor supply chains adds complexity, with the US and China spearheading separation efforts, while other countries strive to maintain competitiveness alongside sovereignty.

    Data centers will be a core component for the digital infrastructure investment in the years ahead (Credit: Bain & Company)

    Beyond AI: quantum and robotics

    Bain's report also looks at adjacent technologies. Quantum computing holds the potential to generate up to $250bn in value for industries like pharmaceuticals, logistics and finance, although fully fault-tolerant devices remain a distant future prospect.

    The realm of humanoid robotics is also witnessing noteworthy investments, yet Bain warns that most deployments are still in nascent stages and significantly reliant on human oversight.

    Anne Hoecker, Head of Bain’s Global Technology Practice (Credit: Bain & Company)

    Implications for investors

    Despite challenges, Bain highlights that private equity interest in technology stays robust, though deal activity decelerated in the latter half of 2025.

    Investors persist in seeing data centers and AI infrastructure as vital areas for expansion, even though the increasing capital demands of projects will necessitate deliberate funding and strategic partnerships.

    The report indicates that meeting AI’s escalating compute needs will require collaborative efforts between tech providers, governments, investors and utilities.

    Absent new revenue and capital influx, AI-driven economic ambitions might outstrip the power provision of data centers intended to underpin them by 2030.

    Company Portals

    • Bain & Company, Inc.

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