⚡ Key Takeaways

A 7 GW shortfall of data center power has blocked $36 billion in planned construction globally. Grid interconnection queues stretch 4–5 years; transformer lead times are 2–3 years. Hyperscalers are contracting directly for nuclear power (Microsoft + Constellation Energy, 2 GW) and acquiring renewable pipelines (Google’s 10.8 GW Intersect Power acquisition) to bypass the bottleneck.

Bottom Line: Organizations planning new data center capacity must begin power sourcing analysis 18–24 months before construction starts — the power constraint is now the primary gating factor, ahead of compute, connectivity, and real estate.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High

Algeria’s 1,480 MW solar commissioning program and underdeveloped grid interconnection queues position it as a potential beneficiary of hyperscaler geographic diversification away from power-constrained US and European markets.
Infrastructure Ready?
Partial

Algeria has solar resource and regulatory frameworks (CREG PPA framework) but lacks the transmission infrastructure, colocation ecosystem, and international fiber density that hyperscale operators require before committing to a new market.
Skills Available?
Partial

Algeria has electrical engineering talent and solar project experience from Sonelgaz/SHAEMS, but limited expertise in data center power architecture, grid-scale battery storage integration, and hyperscale electrical infrastructure design.
Action Timeline
12-24 months

Algeria should position itself for the 2027-2030 wave of hyperscaler geographic diversification by advancing its power infrastructure and international fiber connectivity in 2026-2027.
Key Stakeholders
Ministry of Energy, Sonelgaz, CREG, SHAEMS, Potential International Data Center Investors
Decision Type
Strategic

Capitalizing on the global power crisis requires coordinated infrastructure investment decisions that span energy, telecom, and real estate — a multi-ministry, multi-year strategic commitment.

Quick Take: Algerian infrastructure planners should monitor the global data center power crisis as a market entry signal: the same solar PPA frameworks being validated by global hyperscalers are already in place in Algeria via CREG, and power-abundant markets with new renewable capacity will attract the next wave of data center investment. Advancing Algeria’s fiber connectivity and international interconnection capacity in parallel with the solar buildout is the preparation that converts potential into investment.

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